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It's the WP Minute.
This week we're looking
ahead to WordPress 6.
6.
I know, I know, we just got WordPress 6.
5 a few days ago.
Well, it's coming up next.
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5 launch was nice, fairly uneventful.
I didn't notice anything break on my
sites and I'm happy that I can finally
select Google Fonts for the block
based themes I'm running like 2024.
The community is already
looking ahead to 6.
6 and versions beyond.
With Anne McCarthy leading the
charge for another hallway hangout
scheduled for April 24th at 7 p.
m.
Eastern.
I'll be arriving back from a
fun filled vacation at Disney.
Hopefully I have enough energy to join.
Some of the topics on the agenda are
Data view efforts and its
relationship to the admin redesign.
Overrides and synced patterns,
including the user experience
and the broader reasoning around
naming to unlock an override.
Zoomed out view and the experience
coming together to focus on patterns
rather than granular block editing,
including advanced content only editing.
Layout improvements,
including grid layout support.
Pattern styles, which would offer multiple
ways of styling content based on a
single palette, and color typesets and
presets from the and colors and typeset
presets from the theme style variations.
Style inheritance to help
clarify where and why different
items are styled as they are.
Here's to hoping Overrides in
Sync Patterns makes it to 6.
6 as we really wanted that in 6.
5.
If only Overrides makes it to 6.
6, we'll have another nice but seemingly
uneventful release in mid July.
You can see the roadmap by clicking
the link in the show notes.
Slow, iterative, uneventful, open source.
There's been a lot of fanfare around
wanting WordPress to be more, to go
faster, to ship more things for builders.
And I get it.
I was that person once too.
I'd wager to say that WordPress was a lot
further off from today's capabilities,
but that's just software for you.
Unification, stability, community.
This is what I want from
my WordPress these days.
It's not a product made by a product
company, or at least a traditional method
a commercial product company would take.
I know we can go on the fringes and break
that apart, but there's no marketing and
sales team funneling customer feedback
into the product team, which disseminates
it down to the engineering team and so on.
There's not even just one team.
Think about it, a 20 year old
software product used by millions.
The amount of customer avatars
that touches this software
would put a traditional product
marketing team into a tailspin.
We know how challenging marketing
WordPress is, and most of the good work
is done by those of us in the trenches.
The recent wave of criticism
where WordPress might be
falling short isn't wrong.
It's just not a product solely focused
on solving a WordPress builder problem.
The old me would have
taken issue with that too.
We're part of the We're part of the
people in the trenches, after all.
What I've learned is that
when WordPress continues to
thrive, third party tools win.
People in the service
industry continue to win.
I'm either getting older or I'm seeing
the part where open source WordPress
begins to make sense long term.
So while 20 years is light years in
tech, it's still very young in how we
all operate together as a community.
Here's to WordPress thriving.
Important links, slow news
week again, except of course
for the launch of WordPress 6.
5 and that's just the
first item this week.
Again, you can check these links
in the show notes or subscribing
to the newsletter at TheWPMinute.
com slash subscribe.
5 Regina was released.
I'm sure you've updated by now.
Apparently, Woo.
com is moving back to WooCommerce.
com, citing a major drop in traffic,
impacting their organic search
and their marketplace partners.
A blurb was mentioned
in the WooCommerce 8.
8 delay announcement.
Linked in the show notes, somebody
forwarded me, Forwarded me the email
they received from who I haven't
seen it posted anywhere else.
Let me know if you've seen otherwise.
Syed bulky announces that WP beginner
will be offering professional services.
Steve Bird shows off an interesting
custom publishing workflow UI on
Twitter for his suite of tools.
Beaver Builder.
The Jonas Brothers of Page Builders,
I'm still waiting for someone to
laugh at that, celebrates 10 years.
WordCamp Canada announced
its first round of speakers.
Cammie McNamara tweeted that WordPress
community member Jocelyn Muzak
passed away peacefully on March 31st.
My condolences to Jocelyn's family.
Eric Karkovac asks if we're going
too far with WordPress critiques.
In the new video from me this week on
the WP Minute YouTube channel, watch
this before you upgrade to WordPress 6.
5, which is probably largely too late
for those of you listening to this.
But if you're looking for a
quick recap of WordPress 6.
5 in video form, click the
link in the show notes.
That's it for today's episode.
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