It's garbage. Period.
Yes, I know, it's widely used garbage. Does not change the fact that its GARBAGE.
Yes, I know, it's widely used garbage. Does not change the fact that its GARBAGE.
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I honestly could not, absolutely not, agree more. 😂It's garbage. Period.
Yes, I know, it's widely used garbage. Does not change the fact that its GARBAGE.
Thisis part of the problem.... and why it will most likely never move forward. People simply accept it "as is" and don't expect more from it, or know about it's issues at all.I don’t doubt it’s a convoluted, bloated mess at the backend, but when you’re responsible for powering 40% of the internet I think you can get away with not being optimised.
While I agree with this, the problem with auto updates is that it often breaks stuff unintentionally. Which is why most have it turned off.Thisis part of the problem.... and why it will most likely never move forward. People simply accept it "as is" and don't expect more from it, or know about it's issues at all.
If you look at the number of intrusions into sites (and the issues it causes a shared hosting provider) and the vector used to attack, you usually find that older versions of WordPress stand front & center. If you are going to run it, you need to have auto-updates on, for both add-ons AND WordPress.
In 7 years I've yet to have it break anything... but again, I don't use a lot of fancy add-ons. And I'd rather deal with a "broken" site than a hacked on.While I agree with this, the problem with auto updates is that it often breaks stuff unintentionally. Which is why most have it turned off.
In my experience, having a lot of plugins make it heavy, difficult to maintain and easily broken. So you're completely right. With ESGR and Free Forum Hosting, we tend to keep plugins to a minimum. But still, you can't do without at least 5 or so plugins to transform WordPress into a website from an ordinary blog. It's my business one that broke down multiple times when having a lot of plugins and auto updates. So I had to scale down plugins and since then never had issues.In 7 years I've yet to have it break anything... but again, I don't use a lot of fancy add-ons. And I'd rather deal with a "broken" site than a hacked on.
When you are powering 40% of the internet you have a responsibility to NOT pollute it at the same time.As an end user, Wordpress is fantastic. It’s easy to use, easy to style, easy to SEO. Blogs do much better than forums in SERPs.
I don’t doubt it’s a convoluted, bloated mess at the backend, but when you’re responsible for powering 40% of the internet I think you can get away with not being optimised.
My first ever website was a Wordpress blog and it’s still here now: https://sector77.net
and unless they are making tons of money on it, I doubt that they can afford that... especially since they are supported off the backs of donations.
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