WordPress v.1.0
Miles DavisReleased: 3rd January 2004
WP time machine
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Miles DavisReleased: 3rd January 2004
Miles Davis
Charles MingusReleased: 22nd May 2004
Charles Mingus
Billy StrayhornReleased: 17th February 2005
Billy Strayhorn
Ella FitzgeraldReleased: 22nd January 2007
Ella Fitzgerald
Dexter GordonReleased: 24th September 2007
Dexter Gordon
Michael BreckerReleased: 29th March 2008
Michael Brecker
McCoy TynerReleased: 15th July 2008
McCoy Tyner
John ColtraneReleased: 10th December 2008
John Coltrane
Chet BakerReleased: 10th June 2009
Chet Baker
Carmen McRaeReleased: 18th December 2009
Carmen McRae
Thelonious MonkReleased: 17th June 2010
Thelonious Monk
Django ReinhardtReleased: 23rd February 2011
Django Reinhardt
George GershwinReleased: 4th July 2011
George Gershwin
Sonny StittReleased: 12th December 2011
Sonny Stitt
Grant GreenReleased: 13th June 2012
Grant Green
Elvin JonesReleased: 11th December 2012
Elvin Jones
Oscar PetersonReleased: 1st August 2013
Oscar Peterson
Count BasieReleased: 24th October 2013
Count Basie
Charlie ParkerReleased: 12th December 2013
Charlie Parker
Jimmy SmithReleased: 16th April 2014
Jimmy Smith
Benny GoodmanReleased: 4th September 2014
Benny Goodman
Dinah WashingtonReleased: 17th December 2014
Dinah Washington
Bud PowellReleased: 23rd April 2015
Bud Powell
Billie HolidayReleased: 18th August 2015
Billie Holiday
CliffordReleased: 9th December 2015
Clifford
Pepper AdamsReleased: 16th August 2016
Pepper Adams
Sarah “Sassy” VaughanReleased: 6th December 2016
Sarah “Sassy” Vaughan
William John “Bill” EvansReleased: 8th June 2017
William John “Bill” Evans
Billy TiptonReleased: 15th November 2017
Billy Tipton
BeboReleased: 6th December 2018
Bebo
Betty CarterReleased: 21st February 2019
Betty Carter
Jaco PastoriusReleased: 7th May 2019
Jaco Pastorius
KirkReleased: 12th November 2019
Kirk
AdderleyReleased: 31st March 2020
Adderley
WordPress is a website content management system. The History of WordPress is that it was created as a CMS that allows people to easily edit and manage their website through a simple to use interface, for example adding pages, editing posts, adding images and more. WordPress is written in PHP and uses MySQL to power its database. It is open source, meaning the core WordPress product is entirely free to download and use under the GPLv2 (or later) license.
WordPress was historically created to be a blogging tool, and over the years has grown into being an Enterprise ready CMS. Organisations of all kinds use WordPress to power their websites. High profile websites such as whitehouse.gov are powered by WordPress now, whilst organisations such as NASA, Sony, Microsoft and others use WordPress to power certain websites in their digital estates.
WordPress history begins with the fact that it was created by Matt Mullenweg and Mike Little, two web developers and the founders of WordPress.
In 2002, the developer behind a tool blogging CMS called b2/cafelog decided they were going to stop working on their platform. As users of b2/cafelog, Matt and Mike decided to keep moving forward the development themselves, and so they ‘forked’ b2/cafelog. This means they effectively took a copy of the codebase, so that they could keep developing features and maintaining the software themselves.
This was the beginning of what would go on to become WordPress.
Matt Mullenweg is now the CEO of Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com and other WordPress related services and products. Matt actively leads the development of WordPress as a product. Mike Little remains a WordPress specialist developer and is actively involved in the WordPress community.
WordPress.org remains open source and free to use by all.
The history of WordPress is that first version of WordPress was released on May 27th 2003, but development had been underway for some time before this after Mike and Matt forked b2/cafelog in 2002.
After version WordPress 1.0 was released on May 27th 2003, Matt and Mike continued to develop WordPress whilst gaining the support of other developers who were keen to contribute to the project. Since then WordPress has built an extensive ecosystem of developers and contributors who continue to move the project forward with a regular release program. As a WordPress Agency, we at ClarityDX focus on delivering WordPress for clients.
Further back in the history of WordPress, WordPress was not a widely used CMS. But as of May 2020, WordPress powers over 36% of the entire internet according to w3techs Usage Statistics.
This equates to an over 63% share of the entire Content Management System market.
Relative to WordPress, other CMS platforms such as Joomla, Shopify, Drupal and Workspace are next in terms of popularity, but they have a relatively very small proportion of usage compared to WordPress. For example, Joomla is the next most used CMS, but only has a just over 4% share of the CMS market, relative to WordPress with over 63%.
The history of WordPress shows just how dramatic the growth of a pioneering technology can be.
On the WordPress.org website you can see a list of the recent Release History of WordPress. But by exploring our interactive WordPress Time Machine above, we hope you can get a full visual picture and timeline of WordPress History.
The History of WordPress interactive timeline will hopefully give you an idea of how WordPress used to look when it was first released, and how the default theme and CMS interface have progressed over the years.
Whilst the original WordPress Founders Matt and Mike are still involved in the WordPress project in different ways, there is now a big group of developers who give up their team to work on WordPress as a core product. Earlier in the history of WordPress Matt and Mike were more actively involved in a hands on way.
You can see the current WordPress Core Team here along with various other ‘committers’ who contribute to the project. You can follow the Make WordPress Core blog to see what they are working on.
The WordPress Core Team maintains a Roadmap of all the things that are being worked on currently and planned for the future, as well as planned release dates for some future versions of WordPress.
There is also WordPress Trac where if you’re a developer you can submit bugs or suggestions on the future roadmap for WordPress and get involved with continuing to make WordPress a great product!
The history of WordPress is interesting, but its future story is even more interesting!