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valgeo
Ten years ago today, the first public release of WordPress
became available. Initially started as a fork of the little-known
blogging platform b2/Cafelog, WordPress has grown to be the largest CMS
in the world, powering an astounding 18% of the web.
Nearly 70 million websites run WordPress and it's hard to understate
the impact that the software has had on the world of digital publishing.
Hundreds of high-profile websites, including blogs from CNN, The New York Times and Reuters, all use WordPress. Mashable
isn't a pure WordPress site anymore, but we do use it as a place to
enter content. Since 2004, I personally have published millions of words
using WordPress, most of those on Mashable.
WordPress was started by Matt Mullenweg and Mike Little and the open-source software has grown to include thousands of contributors. Automattic,
the company behind WordPress.com and one of the biggest stewards in the
development of the platform as a whole, announced last week that it had
raised $50 million in a secondary stock transaction.
WordPress started as an easy, free way for users to publish their own
content. If you had a web host that supported PHP and MySQL and you
knew how to use FTP, getting WordPress installed took, famously, under
five minutes. Today, most web hosts have one-click install buttons so
that users don't even have to bother with FTP. Hosted offerings from
WordPress.com and others are also abundantly available.
Moreover, WordPress is no longer just about blogging or personal
publishing. As recently as 2010, I was reticent to call WordPress a true
CMS but that's clearly no longer true. Full web applications are run on
WordPress. Shopping cart systems, Twitter analytics services and even robust WordPress site management solutions can all be built on WordPress.
Plus, the larger ecosystem around WordPress — including plugins,
themes, specialized hosting providers and custom solutions builders — is
mammoth and still growing. Mullenweg told me earlier this year that his
goal for WordPress is for it to be the "platform or operating system"
for the web. That goal is coming closer to fruition with every passing
month.
What's interesting is that, as WordPress has become more powerful, it
has created room for more writing-focused platforms such as Medium, Svbtle and Ghost.
To celebrate 10 years of WordPress, the WordPress community is having special Meetup events across the globe. There is also a special microsite dedicated to tweets, photos and memories associated with WordPress.
We've updated our gallery, below, of how WordPress has evolved over
the years and you can look back at nearly each and every version of
WordPress from 0.7.1 to the latest 3.6 betas.
Share your WordPress memories in the comments.
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