الأحد، 5 مايو 2013

What It Takes to Be WordPress: Now and Then By Rishabh Kapoor


As Mike Little and Matt Mullenweg brought WordPress to the table in 2003, they would have least expected that by 2013 more than 61 million sites would be using the CMS as their powerhouse. But, this has happened, thanks to the many evolutions that the community brought about in the once blogging-only platform. Not many of us would have pondered about the progress of this web-based platform, but it would definitely be interesting to track down the various changes it has undergone since its inception. Here's a tribute to the fastest evolving CMS. Let's take a close look and contrast WordPress now and then.
WordPress Hosting:
Then- It all began with shared hosting. Over the years everything went by smoothly except from some scalability issues that occurred at times. As years passed by several hosts emerged and the VPS and dedicated server hosting options were also adopted exceedingly. Each of these promised to cater to the user needs effectively.
Now- The three hosting options still prevail- dedicated, shared and VPS, and so do majority of hosting providers, but some names have definitely emerged as leaders. One such name is WPEngine. This hosting service provider loaded your website with fast loading pages, enhanced WordPress security and ability to meet bandwidth requisites.
WordPress Templates:
Then- Back then it was just the hand-coded HTML templates that were taken into use. They did not enhance the aesthetic value of the site but were definitely functional. These were, however, not ideal for several purposes.
Now- Today WordPress proudly boasts of an array of themes and frameworks that can be easily customized to meet your web needs. Frameworks such as Genesis are powering numerous websites, which are easily managed through user-friendly control panel.
WordPress Comments:
Then- It was the vanilla comment system that paved the way for comment management. While the system could handle as many as 3,000 comments, it was also a major source of Spam. Over the period of time as gravatars and threaded comments were introduced, WordPress commenting became better.
Now- Gradually websites have adopted WordPress native comment system. This gives users the advantage of taking upgrades via plugins instead of doing the same within the template. It has also reduced spamming significantly, as visitors need to sign up for an account before they comment.
Web Analytics:
Then- Earlier sites depended upon log file based analytics system. These systems were awful especially when it came to authenticating the results that you were viewing.
Now- Google Analytics tool rules the roost. It has only evolved ever since its inception, enabling numerous business sites to grow alongside. You get the advantage of result filtering, real-time tracking, keyword popularity search and a lot more.
WordPress Sidebars and Advertising:
Then- The sidebars were hand-coded and everything was embedded into them. Some developers even used HTML tables to code sidebars. At the advertising front, thing were controlled by AdSense. Developers pasted AdSense code wherever they thought relevant. Along the way, sidebars were replaced by widgets, which minimized the need for coding.
Now- Sidebars have finally found freedom from hand coding! Everything is already configured in WordPress including plugins, widgets and menu. This is the most favorite part for most WordPress developers.
These were some of the significant changes that can be tracked down across the lines of WordPress' evolution from a blogging platform to a full-fledged content management system. Thanks to Matt and his team for creating the most flexible platform across the web.
Author is an experienced coder turned web consultant who provides consultancies to newbie organizations to PSD to Wordpress Template. Author love to guides users in tackling with the PSD to magento theme process.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/7503628

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