Ask HN: Where After WordPress?
49 points| psikomanjak | 1 year ago
Considering I am a javascript person.
None of the solutions right now seem to be close.
Not even ghost.
49 points| psikomanjak | 1 year ago
Considering I am a javascript person.
None of the solutions right now seem to be close.
Not even ghost.
runjake|1 year ago
I think it'd best to just stay. I see one of two likely things happening:
1. Matt comes to his senses and formally secedes his control of the WordPress Foundation and WordPress OSS to a qualified group of people.
2. He doesn't and the project gets forked to something that gets traction and will be immediately compatible.
hedgehog|1 year ago
This is all avoidable if Matt can restore confidence in WP's governance and give the community a sense of a positive vision for the future. That would probably have the side effect of being financially beneficial to Automattic and bring WPEngine into the major contributor fold.
I'm not sure how likely the good version of this is but for everyone's sake I hope WP ends up with some kind of positive resolution.
legitster|1 year ago
Matt would basically have to sell the company and the only buyer would be... cough cough ... private equity!
selimthegrim|1 year ago
ozten|1 year ago
- static website generators (Hugo, etc)
- WYSIWYG editors (Wix, Squarespace)
- Frontends (NextJs, etc) backed by Headless CMS (Strapi, firebase, etc)
There really isn't a good spiritual successor currently. Someone should clone the UX of WP Admin panel, plugins, etc and drop the worst tech debt. Base it on React and make it really easy to deploy.
(edit: formatting)
thewrinklyninja|1 year ago
matfrana|1 year ago
ThinkBeat|1 year ago
Most people do not care about this drama. And they dont want to care about it because it is their golden goose and customers are used to it.
Yes, some people do care, and yes they are very vocal. And yes there are a lot for those voices here.
Just look at X.
Is still around and still has an extreme amount of users. and it looks like some of folks that switched to Mastodon are not loving it.
Now personally I want WordPress to die because its a nightmare of code.
I find the data schema pretty good. Now with Pods it takes care of extending the schema. The back-end code is decent.
The front end story is different. But after I quit using plugins and started doing a lot of my own coding it is somewhat better but the layers upon layers upon layers of CSS is still a nightmare.
I dont believe the world will accommodate my wish on WordPress.
I also want social media to die. I dont belevive the world will accommodate me on that either.
jjwarmerdam|1 year ago
Can't recommend it enough.
AnonHP|1 year ago
maguay|1 year ago
xnx|1 year ago
Probably WordPress. The user-base is so huge that you'll be in good company. There will be an easy migration to whatever the future version is that Matt doesn't have the ability to supply chain attack.
jdboyd|1 year ago
dqv|1 year ago
I don't think the drama will kill Automattic or any of the other involved orgs either. The post-WordPress thing for me, I think, is going to be something that successfully ejects the Gutenberg editor and builds around it. Probably something that borrows from what Drupal has done with Gutenberg and what Corcel has done with WordPress models.
ChrisMarshallNY|1 year ago
I have always considered Drupal to be a pretty industrial-strength system, but quite complex.
One of the nice things about Drupal, is that you could customize the backend. I have always hated WP's backend.
ervine|1 year ago
1. You need a deep knowledge of Drupal to put together something good. It's not beginner-friendly, you will build a couple clunkers before things click.
2. The mind-share is not there like it was for Drupal 7 - the devs still contributing are great, progress is being made, but if you're used to Wordpress plugins or an NPM package being available for whatever you need, Drupal can be frustrating.
legitster|1 year ago
> you could customize the backend. I have always hated WP's backend.
Ironically, this is something the Wordpress Foundation has made worse over the years.
KayL|1 year ago
legitster|1 year ago
As we all realize, WordPress itself is not an immaculate piece of code, but it's the plugin library that makes it. But we now know that even the plugins themselves are liable to hijacking from within.
While it would be nice to start from scratch with a modern, better CMS - the reality is going to be something like ClassicPress but using only premium, manually installed plugins.
marpstar|1 year ago
Eric_WVGG|1 year ago
interstice|1 year ago
I have been considering pouring energy into this problem or at least offering advice, our approach is definitely bespoke and not scalable in the way WP is, but I've long thought the middle ground is in need of ~something~.
ryanmitchell|1 year ago
Zaskoda|1 year ago
I do have one complaint. It can be remarkably difficult to learn how to use Statamic properly. The documentation is a bit lacking. I often struggle to find a solution to a blocker only to find out there's a simple solution that wasn't documented very well. I think this is one of those things that will likely improve as the community continues to grow and mature.
ThinkBeat|1 year ago
When I last did my survey of what I could use as a CMS I ran into this, looked at the licensing and walked away quickly.
But I may be wrong since I didn't do any more research, .
burgerrito|1 year ago
pierreburgy|1 year ago
You can connect these frontend frameworks with a Headless CMS which is, ideally, open-source and written in JavaScript/TypeScript too. This way, you can customize both the frontend and the CMS using the same programming language.
We created Strapi, the most popular open-source Headless CMS, to replace legacy stacks with full JS stacks: from the frontend framework to the CMS.
oliwarner|1 year ago
The biggest difference for daily use is you don't get an editor. You can pick your markup language (markdown being the most popular) then it's just files. If you're a developer this should be natural.
simple10|1 year ago
https://ghost.org/
snats|1 year ago
zdragnar|1 year ago
pluc|1 year ago
daft_pink|1 year ago
XCSme|1 year ago
I am also using Ghost on a different site, I like their clean editor.
partiallypro|1 year ago
andrewmcwatters|1 year ago
I was also hoping that Ghost would become much larger than it has.
mossTechnician|1 year ago
hggigg|1 year ago
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
havefunbesafe|1 year ago
Used WP for 7 years and now Squarespace in its place for 5.
The builder has gotten so much better in the last 3 years, and I am very impressed. The plugin library is expanding at a faster clip now, too.
azangru|1 year ago
To do what?
For blogs, static-site generators (Eleventy, Astro, or Hugo). For CMS, a combination of a headless CMS with something on the front (e.g. Eleventy + CloudCannon). For ecommerce, dunno, Shopify?
bubblesnort|1 year ago
1. Try ClassicPress
2. Move to Drupal
3. See if you like something else. E.g. BoltCMS, OctoberCMS, or one of the october forks.
4. Go back to Joomla
5. Quit your job and do something you'd like to be doing
shrubble|1 year ago
wenbin|1 year ago
mattl|1 year ago
pathartl|1 year ago
mortenjorck|1 year ago
For a larger site with multiple contributors, I'd probably still stick to Wordpress, though. Its admin experience and ecosystem are just too mature to not take advantage of.
dilippkumar|1 year ago
eXpl0it3r|1 year ago
> tl;dr After Matt Mullenweg, BDFL of WordPress and CEO of Automattic, has dragged WP Engine publicly through the mud for not paying a ludicrous amount of money or contributing (enough) to the open source project, WP Engine is suing Automattic and Matt Mullenweg, while Automattic claims misuse of WordPress trademarks.
ThinkBeat|1 year ago
It is confusing.
I would like to think that Core is open source and free but fromt the site it appears that the "control panel" is limited to 1 user in the core / free version?
I have not used it in a long while but last time I did it was insanely fast.
WordPress is open source and free to use no matter how many users yo have.
https://expressionengine.com/
twapi|1 year ago
sirdvd|1 year ago
nunobrito|1 year ago
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