Wordpress – can it cope to power a whole council’s main website? | The Albert Memorial is still there

Thanks for writing this up, Simon!

Seeing as I work with the folks at WPMU DEV (who make the Network Theme) I can answer the licensing question… It’s GPL licensed so once you’ve downloaded it you can do as you please within the confines of the GPL, just as you can with WordPress itself.

For me the big takeaway from that session is that there is a desire to use WordPress, given the complexity current systems represent and the amount of time soaked up by even the seemingly simplest of tasks. What’s stopping mass adoption is security and scalability.

You made a valid point about the WordPress.com setup. I can tell you that Edublogs (also owned by Incsub, who I work for) – the biggest Multisite after WP.com – runs off three servers and hundreds of databases.

In the session I mentioned a few plugins they’ve released which have a lot of the functionality so others can do the same. Multi-DB allows you to use up to 4096 databases. Something else that was mentioned was combining sites across a network so I talked briefly about post indexer and global site search which helps to unify all sites under a network – useful for content strategy.

There was also a conversation about branding in the session. Each sub-site in a network can, as you will know, have it’s own theme but it’s possible to use different domains too with multi-domains and domain mapping. I already know of one council using domain mapping.

Hope that doesn’t sound like an advert! As I said in the session, I don’t think many people realise just how powerful WordPress *can* be and those plugins do help to show what’s possible.

Of course if anyone has questions about using WordPress I’d happily answer them.

I commented on Council meetings – blogging and web-casting

I’ve advised councils on this and found that their main concern is representation – they don’t want the words of councillors or officers taken out of context.

When I approached Lichfield District Council about filming their meetings for hyperlocal site Lichfield Live, they welcomed me with open arms on the condition that the video was not edited (something I hadn’t even contemplated).

In my discussions with councils I’ve told them that they need to allow filming but that they should provide their own recordings as a matter of record. Comms should be charged with the responsibility of making sure that video misrepresentations are countered with the official, unedited version.

This comment is awaiting moderation as I type so don't be alarmed if you don't see it ;)

I commented on Arrested for filming a public council meeting

Excellent deconstruction of events.

You've strayed from saying anything more than the council and Police "should be ashamed" but isn't it a bit more serious than that?

As more and more community bloggers are attempting to hold power to account shouldn't the decisions made by the council and Police here be challenged?

Otherwise, is the door not wide open for other councils and forces in all devolved nations to do exactly the same?

Panopticlick says I'm 1 in 1,479,031 and I'm glad!

Your browser fingerprint appears to be unique among the 1,479,031 tested so far.

Currently, we estimate that your browser has a fingerprint that conveys at least 20.5 bits of identifying information.

Wow, that's very unique! I'm really chuffed. Now ad services can monitor what I look at online and serve up ads that I actually might be interested in instead of the same old crap that makes me want to implement ad blockers.

Reason enough for Murdoch's takeover of BSkyB to be blocked

There has been no mention of the many victims of hacking who have started legal actions against its parent company, News International.

This straight-to-the-point piece by Roy Greenslade shows just how obviously the Murdoch bias runs through News International.

He promised The Times would remain balance when he bought that. Now he's promising the same about Sky.

Come on, wake up and smell the bullshit Mr Hunt.

Neat app idea: product-specific offer subscriptions nearby

Having recently run out of my beloved Strongbow (yes, I do appreciate real cider too, don't worry) I wondered if any of the six supermarkets in Lichfield had an offer on a big box of 24 (my preffered way of buying the 'bow). Wouldn't it be nice to scan one into my phone and subscribe for notifications when any shops nearby have an offer on that very product.

Go on someone, make it.

RSS feeds for everything with WordPress

Did you know that WordPress provides tons of RSS feeds?

Just plonk /feed onto the end of any WordPress URL and you'll get a RSS feed! Here's some examples...

There's the main posts RSS of course: http://journallocal.co.uk/feed

...and the comments feed: http://journallocal.co.uk/comments/feed/

Then you have per-category or per-tag feeds like so;

Put /feed on the end of any individual post URL and you'll get an RSS feed of comments on that post: http://journallocal.co.uk/2011/01/28/how-about-3000-per-month-to-run-a-hyperlocal-site/feed

Happy blogging!