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	<title>Comments on: Three recent discoveries</title>
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		<title>By: Jay Cross</title>
		<link>http://www.internettime.com/2007/05/three-recent-discoveries/comment-page-1/#comment-1008</link>
		<dc:creator>Jay Cross</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 May 2007 03:02:34 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>A thought about WordPress I should have made above.

I used to be as loyal a fan as Blogger ever had. I pushed Blogger on friends like an Amway salesperson on speed. And then I was won over by Movable Type, because their feature set was better. And then I migrated to WordPress when the squabbles and confusion over pricing erupted. (I was running Learning Circuits Blog at the time, and the initial formula price would have set me back $100+ a month.) Then I switched to WordPress.

WordPress is a breath of fresh air. It&#039;s supported by a community of volunteered who take pride in their work. Changes come along as needed. Development is driven by users&#039; needs, not a corporate view of the &quot;marketplace.&quot; Hoo rah. I just came upon this quote from Matt Mullenweg which is spot on:

&quot;Someday I think there will be a realization that the real story is more exciting than the cookie-cutter founder myth the media tries frame everything in. It&#039;s not just one or two guys hacking on something alone, it&#039;s dozens of people from across the world coming together because of a shared passion. It&#039;s not about selling out to a single company, it&#039;s dozens of companies independently adopting and backing an open source platform for no reason other than its quality. I&#039;m not a millionaire, and may never be, but there are now hundreds of people making their living using WordPress, and I expect that number to grow to tens of thousands. That&#039;s what gets me out of bed in the morning, not the prospect of becoming a feature on an Internet behemoth&#039;s checklist.&quot;

-- WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A thought about WordPress I should have made above.</p>
<p>I used to be as loyal a fan as Blogger ever had. I pushed Blogger on friends like an Amway salesperson on speed. And then I was won over by Movable Type, because their feature set was better. And then I migrated to WordPress when the squabbles and confusion over pricing erupted. (I was running Learning Circuits Blog at the time, and the initial formula price would have set me back $100+ a month.) Then I switched to WordPress.</p>
<p>WordPress is a breath of fresh air. It&#8217;s supported by a community of volunteered who take pride in their work. Changes come along as needed. Development is driven by users&#8217; needs, not a corporate view of the &#8220;marketplace.&#8221; Hoo rah. I just came upon this quote from Matt Mullenweg which is spot on:</p>
<p>&#8220;Someday I think there will be a realization that the real story is more exciting than the cookie-cutter founder myth the media tries frame everything in. It&#8217;s not just one or two guys hacking on something alone, it&#8217;s dozens of people from across the world coming together because of a shared passion. It&#8217;s not about selling out to a single company, it&#8217;s dozens of companies independently adopting and backing an open source platform for no reason other than its quality. I&#8217;m not a millionaire, and may never be, but there are now hundreds of people making their living using WordPress, and I expect that number to grow to tens of thousands. That&#8217;s what gets me out of bed in the morning, not the prospect of becoming a feature on an Internet behemoth&#8217;s checklist.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8211; WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg</p>
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