WordPress 3 review
in Software
Verdict
New theme, menu and multi-site handling see WordPress 3 move up a gear
Review Date: 13 Jul 2010
Reviewed By: Tom Arah
Price when reviewed: Free
Features & Design
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Value for Money
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Ease of Use
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| Details | |
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| Part Code | WordPress 3 |
| Review Date | 13 Jul 2010 |
| Price ex VAT | £0 |
| Price inc VAT | £0 |
| Overall rating |
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| Ease of Use rating |
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| Features & Design |
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| Value for Money |
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| Software subcategory | Web development |
| Operating system support | |
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| Operating system Windows Vista supported? |
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| Operating system Windows XP supported? |
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| Operating system Linux supported? |
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| Operating system Mac OS X supported? |
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From around the web
Appreciate the CMS focus
Hi Tom,
thanks for the review of Wordpress 3. Will there be reviews of other popular CMSs too? - Drupal 7 is going to be released any day now and I'd really like to see a review of that too.
By longn on 13 Jul 2010 ![]()
..and Joomla please!
I second the above motion..
By ricksters on 13 Jul 2010 ![]()
Web designer
Shame on you Tom - forget about hiring a web designer? Wordpress is just a technology so unless you want something based on the default theme or you are able to find a third party theme that fits your needs perfectly, design is still an important part of the process. Every single high quality Wordpress site I've ever seen has been designed.
I specialise in creating Wordpress-based sites using the Thesis theme to help with the customisation. By using Wordpress, I drastically reduce the time it takes to get the structure in place but the design itself takes just as long as ever it did.
Wordpress 3.0, for me, hasn't had much impact. I think the custom entry types is likely to have the greatest potential and the improved updating will save a lot of time but otherwise, it's very much an incremental improvement that arises from running out of version numbers below 3.0!
By KevPartner on 13 Jul 2010 ![]()
typo3 4.4
I think wordpress is in a difficult spot now. It's a bit too advanced for bloggers, but not advanced enough for anyone wanting a bespoke and professional solution (although I am aware it has been used for such sites, they usually have a lot of source code additions to bring it up to spec).
How about a review of typo3 4.4?
By ralphuk100 on 14 Jul 2010 ![]()
I second the Joomla review....
owning a web developer company that specialises in Joomla.... www.perfectdesigning.net
... Sorry, couldn't resist it.. ;-)
By CraigieDD on 15 Jul 2010 ![]()
@Longn, @ricksters, @ralphuk100, @craigieDD
Certainly keen to boost Pro’s CMS coverage and to take a look at significant new releases.
@Kevin
I take the point about the incremental improvement and that for existing users the changes will be minimal. However I’ve recently pointed a number of readers towards wordpress.com (which has effectively been trialling 3.0 for a while now) and the new theme and menu handling means they have got on a lot better and have come back very enthused.
And yes I agree that there is an important and as yet largely unrecognized role for professionals to set up WordPress frameworks for end users to then take over. However, as wordpress.com shows, the majority of WordPress users are definitely DIYers. If all you want to do is lob up a few pages for your shop or whatever, WordPress 3.0 definitely makes it very possible to do it yourself.
@RalphUK
I see what you mean about WordPress being caught between two stools but I think it’s actually pretty well placed. The Dashboard is a bit intimidating for absolute beginners but most users should be able to navigate that and, via its add-ons, the framework can then take you a surprising way before you hit its limitations.
By TomArah on 21 Jul 2010 ![]()
Late to the party!
I've just got to this review via the best CMS Drupal/Joomla blog post. I've just installed WordPress via MS WebMatrix and it's pretty impressive for a basic CMS. Can you recommend a website with any 'getting started' practical tutorials?
By NickS on 2 Feb 2011 ![]()
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