Matt Mullenweg Quotes
Top 81 wise famous quotes and sayings by Matt Mullenweg
Matt Mullenweg Famous Quotes & Sayings
Discover top inspirational quotes from Matt Mullenweg on Wise Famous Quotes.
Some folks have suggested that, using WordPress, Prologue, and RSS, you could create a pretty effective distributed version of Twitter.
The promise of the early web was that everyone could have a website but there was something missing. Maybe the technology wasn't ready.
Sometimes, you have to be frustrated and do something unscalable and a waste of your time to be inspired.
I used to always prefer to text, and in fact got indignant when people called. This was totally irrational.
If you were building a real-time game like one of Zynga's games, the WordPress model wouldn't work well for that.
Everybody jokes about that old story about the world only needing five computers, but when you think about it, that's where we're heading.
If I were to wish for two things, they would be as much bandwidth as possible and ridiculously fast browser engines.
I think it's good to have different locations for different modes you want to be in throughout the day, and to keep them separate.
We focus on two things when hiring. First, find the best people you can in the world. And second, let them do their work. Just get out of their way.
Thanks to our friends at the dot-ME Registry, WordPress is able to offer one of the shortest and most effective URLs available today.
One of the things I've been working on for the past few months is a radical simplification of the interface,
My job is such that I get to run new things every day, and I get to run new markets and new technologies. I enjoy that quite a bit.
When you look at things like Flickr and Youtube, they are specialised blogging systems, so why hasn't blogging encompassed that ease of functionality?
Automattic's mission has always been very aligned with WordPress itself, which is to democratise publishing.
People might start with LiveJournal or Blogger, but if they get serious, they'll graduate to WordPress. We try to cater to the more powerful users.
It's good to work for someone else. Because then you appreciate it more when you are an entrepreneur.
The beauty of open-source is that you can pick up right where someone left off and start right there.
I don't care what hours you work. I don't care if you sleep late or if you pick a child up from school in the afternoon. It's all about your output.
Simplicity can have a negative impact when it's the crude reduction of nuances beyond appreciation: a Matisse presented as a 16-color GIF.
You can't build everything and there is no more a killer feature. Everyone has a different killer feature.
WordPress, it's a complex tool; it's like the back of a digital SLR ... but that doesn't work on a phone.
Ultimately, Captchas are useless for spam because they're designed to tell you if someone is 'human' or not, but not whether something is spam or not.
There are 100 million blogs in the world, and it's part of my job as the co-founder of WordPress to help many more people start blogging.
I don't care how someone lives or how good their spoken English is. I do all of my interviews on Skype text chat - all that matters is their work.
Usage is like oxygen for ideas. You can never fully anticipate how an audience is going to react to something you've created until it's out there.
Jeffrey Zeldman had an astonishing ability to craft a seductive coolness using educated references, dry humor, and retro/organic imagery.