What got you into working with WordPress?
I taught myself PHP by writing plugins for phpBB. WordPress was a natural progression with a similar plugin and templating system, and ultimately matured into a better system.
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I taught myself PHP by writing plugins for phpBB. WordPress was a natural progression with a similar plugin and templating system, and ultimately matured into a better system.
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“I wanted to try my hand at affiliate marketing, as well as start my own blog talking about video games. I used to collect older games and consoles, and played a lot of terrible NES games while testing them out.
I had been building static websites for clients for years, and getting into WordPress made me realize how much easier it could be to continually update and edit content over time.”
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Necessity. I’ve been a developer since the late 80’s, but for most of that time I did predominantly Linux work. In 2007, I realized that I couldn’t depend on the government for my income anymore after getting out of the Marines, but I had no education to speak of and few marketable skills. I’d been playing with developing websites since day one of the Internet, but hadn’t considered trying to make a living off of it. WordPress seemed like a good starting point, so I finally took the leap and never looked back.
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Blogger.com. Basically, I’d built a blog using Blogger, and found it to be a horrible experience – so I needed to find something better. WordPress filled that slot very nicely.
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I got into WordPress because it was being forked from b2 cafelog. I enjoyed using b2 cafelog, and the community back then was awesome. It was just a natural choice to make the change to a project that was going to keep continuing to be developed. 🙂
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I was working as a contract designer and front-end developer, and the agency I was working for started doing a lot of projects on WordPress. I pretty quickly fell in love.
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An interest for building websites. I found WordPress.com a few years ago and eventually found WordPress.org, got hosting, setup my site in five minutes, and was playing with all the fun features of WordPress.
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Blogging with Movable Type back in 2002 — made the switch to WordPress in 2003 because I was tired of having to rebuild all of my archives manually every time I wanted to make a change to a template or stylesheet. The WordPress way was more dynamic and faster.
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