This tutorial was written by Brian Aguilar, a graduate of the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. This tutorial was written primarily for students at the J-School, but is intended for anyone just getting up to speed with WordPress for the first time.
After the basics have covered, we also cover some of the advanced plugins that make adding multimedia elements to WordPress sites a breeze.
Additional content by Scot Hacker, Webmaster, KDMC.
WordPress.com: Want to start your own blog quickly and easily? Free hosted blogs will get you up and running fast, but offer a limited selection of themes and plugins, and don't allow uploading of multimedia content types:
WordPress.org: Have access to your own web hosting account? Download your own copy of WordPress, install it on your server, and you'll have total control over your publishing system forever.
Wordpress can be used as CMS (content management system) it has everything you would to build a website, further if something is missing you can rely on their great developer community to have built a plugin to overcome any such short comings.
You can even build a high end news website on Wordpress using one those magazine style themes.
@ecreeds - We do a ton of that here at the J-School. WordPress is the basis for nearly all of our publication sites (we have more than 40 WP installations in total). It's ideal for anything remotely resembles a publication. However it's not suited as a CMS for sites that have custom datatypes that don't fit the Headline/Body model (yes there are custom meta fields, and these can be very helpful, but definitely have their limits). And you can't use it to build much in the way of custom back-end tools.
The key is in knowing where WordPress leaves off and when it's time to pick up a more sophsticated / full-fledged CMS.
WordPress is a state-of-the-art publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability. WordPress is both free and priceless at the same time.
More simply, WordPress is what you use when you want to work with your blogging software, not fight it.
Comments
1) ecreeds, October 8, 2008 at 7:15 a.m. [Link]
Wordpress can be used as CMS (content management system) it has everything you would to build a website, further if something is missing you can rely on their great developer community to have built a plugin to overcome any such short comings.
You can even build a high end news website on Wordpress using one those magazine style themes.
2) Scot Hacker, October 28, 2008 at 4:16 p.m. [Link]
@ecreeds - We do a ton of that here at the J-School. WordPress is the basis for nearly all of our publication sites (we have more than 40 WP installations in total). It's ideal for anything remotely resembles a publication. However it's not suited as a CMS for sites that have custom datatypes that don't fit the Headline/Body model (yes there are custom meta fields, and these can be very helpful, but definitely have their limits). And you can't use it to build much in the way of custom back-end tools.
The key is in knowing where WordPress leaves off and when it's time to pick up a more sophsticated / full-fledged CMS.
3) Burak Kona, January 26, 2009 at 6:29 a.m. [Link]
WordPress is a state-of-the-art publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability. WordPress is both free and priceless at the same time.
More simply, WordPress is what you use when you want to work with your blogging software, not fight it.
<a href="http://www.burak.name.tr" target="_blank" title="wordpress"><b>wordpress</b></a>
4) Paola Corie, February 25, 2009 at 9:31 a.m. [Link]
Nice tutorial, thanks for the share :)
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