Three releases in 8 days. I’m beat. But beyond excited to see us ship WordPress 3.9 on time despite a few weeks of insanity.
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
There were 267 contributors to WordPress 3.9, the most ever (and in less than four months), and I hope to see that number continue to grow.
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
Biggest of thanks to my WordPress 3.9 partner-in-crime @getsource, who kept me sane especially toward the end there. Congratulate him too!
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
There will always be new features, but I loved how hard we worked in WordPress 3.9 to iterate on what we already had. Great refinements.
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
.@gcorne @azaozz @wonderboymusic & many others *crushed* it when it came to building a smoother media editing experience in WordPress 3.9.
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
.@avryl @melchoyce @helenhousandi @empireoflight @michaelarestad @shaunandrews championed the smooth designs of 3.9. Open source design FTW!
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
It was a treat to sit back and watch @westonruter and @ocean90 get the widgets customizer ready to go. I never had to worry for a second.
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
It was great seeing @chrisb33, @fmmfonseca, and @bausero iterate on theme customization (headers) and the installer. Both are much better!
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
Led by @DrewAPicture and @kimparsell, every WordPress hook (of thousands) now has full inline documentation. Next up: an official reference.
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
Then there’s folks like @jeremyfelt, @garypendergast, @kovshenin, and @ethitter who crushed it on improving WordPress internals in 3.9.
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014
Now: Time for some sleep! Oh, wait, not yet. See you on @Dradcast tonight at 8 p.m. (And @post_status tomorrow and @wptavern on Friday.)
— Andrew Nacin (@nacin) April 16, 2014