Nov 21, 2006 | blog
This is great news for the team over at Automattic – WordPress has become a world-class platform for interactive communications, and this latest move is well-earned.
The new version will apparently be marketed through KnowNow, a Sunnyvale, CA company which has a bit of experience in the enterprise marketplace.
The new KnowNow WordPress Enterprise Edition will offer enterprises a comprehensive authoring solution that includes a powerful new platform for open communications and information management. With the addition of WordPress, KnowNow offers enterprises a platform to build their customer-facing presence in the blogosphere, or an internal platform behind their own firewall to support interactive employee communication. The solution enables authoring of content that leverages the RSS format, meaning enterprises can speed the delivery of critical information to employees, partners, or customers.
Via: The Blog Herald – WordPress goes Enterprise (SixApart cries in dark corner)
Jul 31, 2006 | blog
The busy folks over at WordPress.org have revved up ver. 2.0.4 of WordPress. Mainly a security and bug fix revision, this is a recommended upgrade for every WordPress blog.
Jun 3, 2006 | blog
The upgrade went quick and easy as usual. WordPress is truely a great blogging platform – the quality and flexibility built into the product never stops impressing me.
Jun 3, 2006 | blog
In case any WordPress users haven’t noticed, Matt has posted a new release – version 2.0.3. The upgrade includes some small enhancements for importing TypePad posts, some performance tweaks, a fix for podcast enclosures, and several security related updates back-ported from the upcoming 2.1 release.
The upgrade proceedure is the same process as previous versions – super simple! Read more on Matt’s post on the WordPress Development blog.
You can find the download files here.
Mar 18, 2006 | blog
So there is an update to WordPress out now (v2.0.2) that fixes some security issues:
“The problems addressed are unannounced XSS issues privately discovered and reported to the WordPress team. Thanks to Mark Jaquith, Robert Deaton, and David House for assisting with this release.”
Please check out the update at WordPress.org