profile

Brian Coords

Github Copilot and the WordPress Gold Rush?

Published over 1 year ago • 3 min read

New year, new you? Is that a thing?

I don't know about you, but I'm a chronic New Year's over-planner. I love the chance to set myself some goals that I'll grow to hate and eventually ignore. This year, I'm trying very hard to boost my personal writing/blogging habit (along with the usual "more exercise, less food and twitter").

That means I'm coming out of the gate this year with a lot of content. Will it last? Time can only tell.

My Recent Writing

Blog Posts vs Articles
What’s the difference between a blog post and an article?

What’s the point of Twitter?
I’m reevaluating my relationship with Twitter and with social media in general.

There’s too much code
With AI tools like Github Copilot on the rise, I have some concern about the sheer amount of code we’re dealing with in our jobs today.

As you can tell, I've had AI on the brain recently. Over at MasterWP, I wrote more broadly about using Github Copilot, especially as a WordPress developer.

🔗 MasterWP: Getting Cozy with GitHub Copilot
Github Copilot is definitely good – but is it “good”? And how does it fare for WordPress developers?

There's Gold in Them There Blogs

Speaking of MasterWP... There's a great MWP article on this whole "WordPress Gold Rush" concept that I really recommend reading. But first, I'd start with Justin Ferriman's piece WordPress Gold Rush? - I think he does a great job of presenting the affirmative argument for an upcoming WordPress gold rush. On MasterWP, Rob does a great job making The case against a WordPress ‘gold rush’.

I tend to fall on the 'no gold rush' side of the argument. To me, blocks are NOT plugins. Plugins completely repaint and rebrand the WordPress experience. The best plugins create their own ecosystems (WooCommerce, Gravity Forms, Elementor). You know you're using them, sometimes even moreso than you realize you're still in WordPress. On the other hand, blocks are just blocks. They're tiny. They live in little pockets of the editor.

I could see the argument for a new wave of block-ecosystems (like Kadence) but at the end of the day, everyone (except for Justin) seems to be crying "gold rush" from the safety of a job at Automattic or a hosting company. I'll be more convinced when I see them starting the new Genesis or iThemes.

A few quick links before I go

That's all for now. Have a great week and reach out here or on the fediverse (or Twitter) to talk about all things WordPress.

Brian Coords

WordPress Developer and Writer.

Read more from Brian Coords
my personal avatar - a photo of me

Brian Coords November 11th Of Mastodon and the WordPress site editor ↓ Happy Friday! Last week I spent some time digging into the block editor and trying to understand the #!&@#ing logic behind alignments and widths. I started by venting on Twitter but ended up writing a post about what I've learned. If you're coming from the Bootstrap/Tailwind mindset for widths/containers, I recommend giving it a read: “Normal” width websites in the block editorFellow WordPress developer Teron Bullock is...

over 1 year ago • 2 min read
my personal avatar - a photo of me

Brian Coords October 22nd Fancy WordPress Javascript and Fun with Full Site Editing ↓ Happy Saturday! It's been a while since I wrote anything here, but I have been busy digging into all things WordPress. Last month I appeared on the WP Builds podcast talking about the WP Feature Notifications project- an attempt to clean up your admin notices and alerts once and for all. It's my first attempt at contributing to WordPress and it's been an... interesting education in open source...

over 1 year ago • 3 min read
my personal avatar - a photo of me

Brian Coords February 18th WordPress 5.9, Full Site Editing, Spotify, and More ↓ WordPress 5.9 and full site editing was a major focus of last week, and you'll see that in some of the articles below. I also spent a lot of time supporting the acquisition and relaunch of MasterWP, the newsletter for WordPress Pros. I definitely recommend adding MasterWP to your WP newsletter feed as well, as we have some great things in the works.As always feel free to respond to this email and follow me on...

over 1 year ago • 2 min read
Share this post