If you make the Internet, live on the internet.
Technology is closing the gap between what one can imagine and what one can do and as a result the equality of opportunity is unmatched in human history.
I don’t have a Wikiquotes page.
My own personal dream is that the majority of the web runs on open source software.
I don’t care how someone lives or how good their spoken English is. I do all of my interviews on Skype text chat – all that matters is their work.
Usage is like oxygen for ideas. That means every moment you’re working on something without it being in the public it’s actually dying, deprived of the oxygen of the real world.
Do what you love and don’t focus on money – life’s too short.
I drive a Prius and drink $10k bottles of wine. The wine isnt on Instagram. The Prius is.
Historically, WordPress has been purely focused on the writing side. However, were thinking about mobile completely differently, and I think theres a big opportunity to take the community of creators that loves WordPress and deliver an audience to the amazing things theyre making.
You can’t build everything and there is no more a killer feature. Everyone has a different killer feature.
I am the unhappiest WordPress user in the world, I think it sucks.
The biggest motivation is not the money but the impact.
Simplicity not simplistic.
It’s good to work for someone else. Because then you appreciate it more when you are an entrepreneur.
The biggest challenge for open source is that as it enters the consumer market, as projects like WordPress and Firefox have done, you have to create a user experience that is on par or better than the proprietary alternatives.
People might start with LiveJournal or Blogger, but if they get serious, they’ll graduate to WordPress. We try to cater to the more powerful users.
As the web becomes more and more of a part of our every day lives, it would be a horrible tragedy if it was locked up inside of companies and proprietary software.
For me, it always comes back to the blogger, the author, the designer, the developer. You build software for that core individual person, and then smart organisations adopt it and dumb organisations die.
From the first time I held an iPhone, the space has evolved quickly, and people have shifted from reading content on their desktops to smartphones and iPads, even long-form stuff.
In my home office, I have two large, 30-inch computer monitors – a Mac and a PC. They share the same mouse and keyboard, so I can type or copy and paste between them. I’ll typically do Web stuff on the Mac and e-mail and chat stuff on the PC.
As an entrepreneur making decisions for your company, always go back to your first principles of what’s important to you and why you started in the first place.