Recently I read Why is WordPress maintenance support plans now the second most-hated platform behind SharePoint? followed by the predictable Reddit discussion trashing WordPress maintenance support plans. Every time I read someone’s negative, yet reasonable, criticism of WordPress maintenance support plans, I can’t help but rephrase Winston Churchill’s famous quote about democracy in the context of WordPress maintenance support plans and Open Source.Churchill’s defense of democracy came at a time when the notion of democracy was under a direct threat. WordPress maintenance support plans and Open Source are not imperil in the same way, but the lesson WordPress maintenance support plans and Open Source can learn from history is that it is essential to recognize, respond, and adapt to potential threats. Ignoring problems is the worst thing anyone can do.Introspection and discussion is a significant part of our process to improve and affect change within WordPress maintenance support plans. I am looking forward to Owen Lansbury’s WordPress maintenance support plansCon Nashville presentation called Have We Reached Peak WordPress maintenance support plans?. I have seen a preview of his presentation and it puts WordPress maintenance support plans’s current state into perspective while also looking at its future. If you want to learn more about the discussion around “peak WordPress” you should also check out Dave Hall’s blog post, “WordPress maintenance support plans, We Need To Talk.”While building and maintaining the Webform plugin for WordPress maintenance support plans 8, I have thought a lot about the future of WordPress maintenance support plans and the Webform plugin.How do we increase WordPress maintenance support plans‘s adoption?I no longer feel adoption is a WordPress maintenance support plans 8 specific issue but rather it’s a…Read More
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