<![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, movable type]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gawker.com.png <![CDATA[Gawker: valleywag, movable type]]> http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/movabletype http://gawker.com/tag/valleywag/movabletype <![CDATA[Blog about Six Apart's blog software unblogged]]> How absurd: Six Apart, the blog-software maker which has helped so many bloggers overturn the staid, outdated conventions of journalism and PR, has tried to use an embargo to quash news of a software upgrade until 9 p.m. tonight. Mashable published the news earlier this morning, and then yanked its story. The software in question, Movable Type Pro, is an anodyne improvement, turning MT's existing commenter features into a social network. Why this news ought to be released in a coordinated fashion is beyond me; for that matter, why it's interesting is also beyond me, since Six Apart has been trying to get into the social-network business since its ill-fated purchase of LiveJournal in 2005. News.com, admirably, has kept its post online. Here's Mashable's now-unpublished report by writer Kristen Nicole:

A couple of months ago Six Apart launched a new initiative that provided custom ad options aimed to offer more engaging ways for brands to interact with content producers and consumers, thanks in part to its acquisition of Apperceptive. Things seemed to have worked well for Six Apart as a result, and the next step for the blogging software creator is a new self-service option for site publishers to add social networking capabilities to their online publications with the upgraded Movable Type Pro (MT Pro).

This combines Movable Type’s blogging platform with social networking features, which is something that many traditional and new media sites have begun to do in the past couple of years for branding purposes and additional engagement with consumers. Many traditional media companies have found this to be a challenging task given the existing crossover audience and lack of integration with publishers’ content for consumers’ purposes.

Now that companies have begun to find more productive ways of interacting with their customers online, Six Apart is capitalizing on this growing necessity with additional social networking tools that can be integrated with the Movable Type blogging platform. This will include things like social media content aggregation capabilities for users, more ways for users to share and contribute items, forums, groups, and more.

I asked Chris Alden, CEO of Six Apart, and a few of his team members how brands are hoping to use any of this user-generated content that’s coming through these newly enhanced blogs and online publications, and he mentioned that things like forums and content aggregation are quite popular, though there may not be a direct way in which brands will be using the content per say. Being part of the conversation, however, is priceless. “Even if it’s sharing content that they find interesting across the Web is contributing content,” said Alden, “aggregating is important for these larger companies. It’s not theoretical anymore. It’s real.”

Along with the new MT Pro launch, Six Apart is also releasing Movable Type 4.2, which is the most recent version of its platform. It comes with a handful of new and improved features, including enhanced performance, simplified default templates for easy “quick start” blogs, and open source TypePad Anti-spam built in.

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<![CDATA[Filthy rich Matt Mullenweg calls rival "dirty"]]> Automattic, Matt Mullenweg's blog-tools startup, is readying an upgrade to its WordPress software this week. Anil Dash of Six Apart took the occasion to let WordPress users know they can upgrade to his company's Movable Type instead. It's a move straight out of Oracle's handbook. But Mullenweg freaked out, calling the post "desperate and dirty." Dash responded by charging Mullenweg with "slander." Some are under the delusion that this nerdfight is about software. It's not. It's about money.

Specifically, Mullenweg's money. Automattic recently raised $29.5 million in venture capital — bringing its total raised past Six Apart. The Automattic deal was unusual: Some of the money went directly to Mullenweg, and a handful of other employees, instead of to his company. Automattic's investors, in other words, partially bought him out. A failed bidder for Automattic has been going around saying that Mullenweg's personal take was around $20 million.

Why buy Mullenweg out? VCs normally like to keep founders' incentives in line with their own, so everyone's shooting for a big payday. One might think showering a founder with cash ahead of an IPO or acquisition might be a sign that he's valued. Actually, it's the opposite: Making Mullenweg rich before eveyrone else is his investors' way of saying they don't care if he takes a hike.

Mullenweg surely realizes this. As satisfying as it might be to check his bank account, it has to be frustrating to realize he's not deemed relevant to Automattic's future. And that, more than anything, is what must prompt him to lash out at his chief rival.

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<![CDATA[Six Apart is entering the build-your-own-social-network-that-no-one-will-care-ab...]]> Compiler]]]> http://gawker.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=322229&view=rss&microfeed=true <![CDATA[Six Apart has, at last, released Movable...]]> Six Apart has, at last, released Movable Type 4.0. The best new feature in the blog-software package: You know those hopelessly annoying dweebs who leave tiresome comments on your blog? Why, now you can "promote" them to be full authors! How thrilling: more loser-generated content. A feature suggestion for Movable Type 4.1: Give readers the ability to demote them right back to commenter status. [Movabletype.com]

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<![CDATA[Six Apart's new blog software limps to the finish line]]> Movable Type, the aging blog software made by San Francisco startup Six Apart, may be set to release a new 4.0 version on Tuesday. Barely. Which is bad, considering that Movable Type is still the company's cash cow. Byrne Reese, its product manager, accidentally forwarded an internal planning memo to an outside developers' mailing list. Reese says the memo, meant to help management decide on Monday whether or not the product is ready, is "intentionally pessimistic." But it has a laundry list of unresolved bugs. And Reese admits that some of the bugs will "dramatically slow" adoption of the new version. Despite that, he thinks the company can "manage" a release. And by manage, he means spin like a top: "We will need to be on our toes in regards to communication and PR to stay ahead of the curve with people who will say that we rushed the release." Here's a radical notion, for a blog-software company that claims to be about transparency: Why not just admit you did, in fact, rush the release? The full memo, after the jump:


The full memo:

A plan is coming together and I wanted to brief everyone on what it is and make sure that everyone is clear on what they need to do.

WHAT HAS BEEN DONE:

* Byrne has created a new release in FogBugz R16. This is a placeholder
right now for all bugs that will be fixed in 4.01.

* Byrne has moved all active issues in R15 to R16, leaving all resolved
issues in R16 to be verified and tested by QA.

WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE TODAY (Sunday US time):

* Maarten needs to check in any remaining EMEA translations.

* Byrne will create new builds of MT from the release-15 and place them on
koro64 for QA and Engineering.

* SAKK QA and Chris Hall is to smoke test these builds ASAP so that Byrne
can push them to mt.org ASAP.

* Once pushed, QA should continue to hammer the build to find any other
remaining issues.

MONDAY (US time)

* Some reports from the public suggest that there could be issues in
upgrading from 3.x that have lots of plugins installed. Once RC3 is pushed,
QA should devote a resource to investigating potential issues associated
with upgrading installs with lots of plugins.

* Product and Management team need to meet to review status and make a
go/no-go decision.

——-

That's the plan. I will notify mt-dev as soon as builds are ready.

On 8/4/07 11:35 PM, "Byrne Reese" wrote:

> (sorry in advance for the long email)
>
> We have a big decision in front of us in the next day or two, and I wanted to
> outline from my perspective where I think we are with the product.
>
> Let me first provide an update:
>
> * RC2b was released Friday night - it contained a fix for a security
> vulnerability we found in mt-check.cgi
>
> There is a release branch called R15 (which would otherwise be RC3 if we
> decided to release RC3 as opposed to MT4). It contains the following issues
> (some are already fixed):
>
> P1 - 56173 - A design collapses on Confirm Publishing Configuration screen
> under IE6
> P1 (fixed) - 56174 - XHTMLification is not working in IE6
> P1 (fixed) - 56188 - Dynamic pages have wrong permalinks to entries
> P1 (fixed) - 56186 - Itemset actions broken due to unescaped label in
> javascript
>
> P2 - 55941 - IE6: Clicking 'arrow' icon broke the layout of the insert image
> screen
> P2 - 55896 - Cityscape banner images are cut off ...?
> P2 (fixed) - 56079 - Blog Templates: Standardize metadata on detail vs list
> pages
> P2 (fixed) - 56129 - Clicking Entry Name on "Edit Comment" screen yields error
> P2 (fixed) - 56136 - Delete blogs causes error with sqlite
> P2 (fixed) - 56087 - Blog Templates: Move Moderation message to comment
> confirmation page.
> P2 (fixed) - 56183 - Dynamic Author Monthly archive does not have his/her
> monthly archive list in dynamic publishing
> P2 (fixed) - 56189 - Can't write an entry on IIS5/6 with perlis.dll
>
> P3 - 56089 - L10N: Manage assets
> P3 - 56072 - L10N: System overview - List authors
> P3 - 56042 - L10N: Entry date
> P3 - 56080 - Blog Templates: Simplify Search Widget
> P3 - 56081 - Blog Templates: Standardize display of tags and categories
> P3 - 56082 - Blog Templates: Banner text overlapping illustrated headers
> graphics
> P3 - 56083 - Blog Templates: Content Nav Styling
> P3 - 56084 - Blog Templates: Style Search Form on search results listing
> P3 - 56085 - Blog Templates: Comment Confirmation: Link to "original entry"
> should refresh original entry
> P3 - 56086 - Blog Templates: Polish Styles on Preview Comment screen
> P3 - 56092 - Blog Templates: Add edit link if author is logged in via checking
> javascript cookie
> P3 - 56091 - Blog Templates: Style comments by authors on the blog
> P3 - 56090 - Blog Templates: Style author comments
> P3 - 56088 - Blog Templates: Add widgets to Comment Confirmation page
> P3 - 56217 - Rich text editor is adding editor-content.html to anchor links
> P3 (fixed) - 55690 - Image.pm not including png as type
> P3 (fixed) 56171 - Filter message is wrong in list pings when it's filtered to
> show category trackbacks / entry trackbacks
> P3 (fixed) - 56028 - Store relative paths for asset file and URL in
> WXRImporter and AtomServer
> P3 (fixed) - 55947 - Warnings when DebugMode 1
> 56071 - L10N: TrackBack settings
> P3 (fixed) - 55683 - Republishing popup localized incompletely
>
> P4 - 55980 - Username isn't left-aligned in role users listing screen table
> P4 - 56004 - [IE6] strange navigation display on Grant Permissions:Select
> Blogs page
> P4 - 55203 - File upload options does not disappear when unchecking the option
> P4 - 55776 - Save, Delete and Preview button goes up a little when clicked in
> IE6/7
> P4 - 55438 - A part of Japanese comment is garbled under Expanded view mode
> P4 (fixed) - 55721 - MT::Component does not return an error when MT::Template
> cannot be created.
> P4 (fixed) - 55937 - IE6: Insert image screen is broken by hitting tab key
> time and again
> P4 (fixed) - 54746 - Wizard sometimes proceeds without mt-static successfully
> set up
>
> ——————
>
> Now in reviewing email on ProNet, mt-dev, and a few public case submissions
> here are some areas of risk and exposure that I think we also have:
>
> 1) Real world upgrade scenarios - our upgrade testing tests the upgrade
> process from one vanilla install of MT to another. None of these tests
> actually test what the upgrade process is like if you have a lot of plugins
> installed, as most of our users do. Normally this is not a big deal, but
> anecdotal evidence suggests that many plugins users have (especially those
> that have been folded into the core) will somehow conflict with the MT4
> counterparts resulting a poor upgrade experience, such as errors and the like.
> We are only starting to see these reports because until now because very few
> people have been willing to upgrade their production blogs from MT3 to MT4.
> Most have been using a clean MT4 install with no plugins.
>
> 2) Plugin API bugs - I have seen many developers having difficulty with the
> API, finding changes in behavior that result in unanticipated results. And
> also finding bugs. Some developers have also challenged, and legitimately so,
> our claims on backwards compatibility. Developers have been slow to build on
> top of MT4 because of a lack of documentation, so we have little data to truly
> predict how many bugs may exist in the API.
>
> 3) Few will Upgrade - Precious few 3rd party plugins have been updated to be
> MT4 compliant/compatible. This will dramatically slow the up take of MT4 in
> the market place by existing MT3 customers. The resolution here is simply more
> time and more documentation to help.
>
> ——-
>
> All in all, I think the product is in a place where we actually could manage a
> release. The operative word being "manage." We will need to be on our toes in
> regards to communication and PR to stay ahead of the curve with people who
> will say that we rushed the release.
>
> I think we will have some explaining to do with developers as they will be
> very mad that we released without giving them time or the resources to upgrade
> their plugins. Speaking from experience, it is frustrating having to answer
> support requests from users of my plugins that are frustrated that I have not
> updated them to the latest version of MT. Developers answered support requests
> from their users will no doubt be very willing to blame Six Apart for not
> giving them the documentation necessary to update their software.
>
> But there are no absolute show stopper issues IMHO. Yes, there are a number of
> high priority/low severity issues, but I think we can manage them. Especially
> in light of the fact that a 4.01 will be mandatory with the release of
> Enterprise Pack.
>
> ——-
>
> In summary, I will reserve judgement on whether I feel we should release or
> not until I can hear the perspectives of my colleagues. I also want to let
> everyone know that this email is intentionally pessimistic. I think it
> important we go into our decision making process with our eyes open to all the
> information, pleasant and unpleasant.
>
> I will end on an optimistic note however. The reason I feel that we can afford
> to launch on Tuesday is because despite any issues before us, MT4 is a stellar
> product that is light years ahead of MT3. Users, the community and customers
> will appreciate that. And despite any feelings they may have that are
> negative, everyone I have come in contact with is just floored by MT4. So I
> think we have some good will in the bank to draw upon, if we must. :)
>
> Byrne Reese
> Product Manager, MT

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