GPL

Spectacu.la Re-opens!

Well, after an abortive mission with RBS WorldPay (who we’ll get back to in due course) we decided to celebrate being listed by WordPress.org on their premium providers list by re-opening the site to new members.

We’ve done this along with some simple changes to licensing:

  1. As I’m sure you appreciate, we’re now a GPL only site - all themes are available under the GPL with no restrictions applied.
  2. Membership will entitle you to things such as original source material - for example, the Word Documents for the WordPress User Guides we’ve produced.
  3. There’s just one price, and this gives access to the forums for £25+VAT per year.
  4. We give no guaranteed support in our forums - if you need SLA’d support you have to head on over to Interconnect IT and ask them about support contracts.
  5. But we’ll be there - ready to answer questions where possible.

The idea of memberships is that it’s a way to support our development of future themes.  They take a lot of time, and cost a surprising amount of money to develop.  Whilst goodwill is wonderfully, it doesn’t pay for food on our tables.  Consequently we encourage you to a: join the forum and take part and b: if you love our themes you should give us good reviews and ratings, and mention us where you can.

We’re a community now.  Welcome!

Categorised as: News

All GPL now…

Yes, we’ve finally done it - Spectacu.la is now 100% GPL. All our themes are now available for free download.

Caribou Withdrawn - Temporarily

We’ve had to withdraw the Caribou News Theme for the time being, as it’s got elements that aren’t able to be released under the GPL license. Rather than wait (as we had been doing) we’ve decided to say sod it and simply withdraw it for the moment. When it does come out in GPL form it will, we feel, be the most powerful WordPress theme available with this license.

Why?

We had to get with the community, basically. Our plan had always been pragmatic - write a theme and later release it as GPL. That way we would be able to satisfy our commercial aims along with our community aims. But there’s a considerable amount of controversy over the detail of the GPL and in this case the view of the WordPress community didn’t agree with ours.

Now, you have a few choices when your views don’t align with your community - align with the community, change the community view, or fight your ground. Well, as far as we’re concerned life is too short to fight the community or to try and change it… so that left one choice. Well OK, two choices - we could have given up and shut up shop, but we’ve decided to continue with Spectacu.la for the moment.

There Are Downsides

We’re not at all sure if this way of running a club is a winning solution. Ultimately, we only offer our own themes - there’s nothing to stop a rival offering our themes (and others!) and undercutting us whilst offering the same level of forum support. They won’t have the cost of making themes, just of support. For sure, the community may do the honourable thing and avoid them, but I believe about 80% of the people out there aren’t really active members of the WordPress community. They don’t really care where they source their themes, and they’re not going to contribute.

We saw that when Brian Gardner withdrew his free downloads from Revolution Too that there must have been a problem with his model. We don’t know if it was costs, or hassle, or what, but he decided to give the free downloads up. Quietly he was dropped from WordPress.org, and that was the end of it. But he had, somehow, managed to stir up the whole wasps nest of debate on the GPL and when he first made the GPL announcement other clubs that were non-GPL were cast out.

A Promise

We will never ever withdraw our themes from free download. If the bandwidth gets a bit much then they’ll be available in the WordPress.org repository soon anyway (generously hosted by Automattic, I believe) and that will be fine for us. In fact, that’s what we want - we want it to be as easy as possible for you to install our themes on WordPress 2.8 when the auto-installation features come out. This is important and useful.

Memberships to the themes club are currently unavailable - watch the site for an announcement once the new payments gateway is tested (Paypal was too expensive and too clunky for us) and you’ll soon be able to join the forums once more.

Past members who supported us in the early days will be given a year’s free membership.

Categorised as: News

WordPress.org Pull 200 GPL Themes

WordPress.org on the 2nd of December 2008Without any prior announcement, WordPress.Org pulled 200 (well, 201 to be precise) themes from their Theme Library overnight on the 9th/10th of December 2008, suspending them.

The only information we got was:

Links to spectacu.la will no longer
be approved, as a result this theme
has been suspended.

That was it.  A lot of work to get the theme right, to conform to their standards, xhtml standards and every damn browser we could find and they pull it with no more than a one-line automated mailing.  I e-mailed but, as is usually the case with anything to do with Automattic, there was no response.  And of course there’s nothing on the blog either.  No surprise there then.

Prior to the pulling, 712 themes were available (see image above right), while now there are just 511 themes available (below right).

We’re Highly Miffed (to be quite English about it)

At first I was just irritated.  Then I guessed that they’d decided that a theme couldn’t link back to any commercial organisation - even if that commercial organisation is producing no-strings GPL code.  I’m not quite sure why WordPress.org has such an issue with commercialism - Automattic, who run WordPress, are a very commercial entity.  The $29.5m of funding behind them is hardly insignificant.  $29.5m is about 29,500,000 times more profit than we’ve made from Spectacu.la so far.  We don’t have the luxury of venture capital either, being funded entirely out of our own pockets.

The more I think about it, the more I realise that Automattic appear to want it every way - to have their own protected IP and commercial interests whilst keeping all others as far away as possible.  Anyone, commercial or otherwise, who contributes to a GPL project puts in a huge amount of time and effort on code that they could so easily lose control of and for which there’s definitely zero direct monetary reward.  With the Evening Sun theme we created we introduced an interesting approach to handling threaded comments that’s designed to prevent rambling threads, but allow nested conversations regardless.  That code’s GPL.  Anybody can use it.

WordPress.org on the 10th of December 2008And the reward for all the work that went into this?  The work that got it backward compatible, degrading safely if JS wasn’t available, and didn’t break in IE6?  Well it seems we can’t have it.  Or at least, not from WordPress.org anyway, even though that code, perhaps in modified form, could easily find itself all over the place.  All we wanted was a measly link, and we can’t have it.

Dangled Carrots

One of the reasons we created Spectacu.la was because last year Matt Mullenweg announced the idea of a Themes Marketplace.  This would allow themes developers to earn some money.  Well, 50% of the price of the theme anyway, with the remaining 50% going to Automattic.  But it’s expensive to set these things up… if it’s done commercially.

And we thought that it was a great idea - I dropped Mr Mullenweg a line, and we soon received instructions and a deadline.  We created a brand new theme (Grassland in fact) which was to be an exclusive - we couldn’t make it available anywhere else - and it had to be GPL so it fit in with WordPress.org for free download and rights.  Fair enough.  Prior to that we’d always coded for clients, it would be nice to give something back.

Our pricing for Grassland was pretty low, figuring that it wasn’t that ornate a theme, and didn’t have any special functionality.  I think we were aiming at around $20 per theme.

Soon enough we got confirmation that we would be launch partners for this club.  Yay!  Our code is good, and we made required modifications to fit in to Automattic’s standards.

Then it went silent.  A month passed.  I e-mailed.  And nothing.  A lot of prodding later and we were told there were delays.  These things happen and we had other things to do, so we waited some more.  Eventually in summer I contacted Lloyd Budd who was in charge of this element of the project, and… nothing.

That’s the problem.  It took two weeks to develop Grassland to the standards to which we and Automattic work.  We’re quicker these days, but even so… that’s quite a bit of work for someone to do for exactly $0.  And at that time the company as a whole was losing a lot of money.  We really needed some funds, and they never came.  Not even a few quid.  A theme download a week would have covered our broadband bills, for example.  We weren’t in financial trouble, but these are difficult times for a new company without venture capital.  But in the end forming Spectacu.la as a way to help raise some revenue from our intelectual property made clear sense.

Lack of Openness at Automattic?  Arrogance?

Yep - just doesn’t feel like a very open company.  You’ll struggle to find their address on their website (I couldn’t)  and they rarely give clear guidelines about what they do and do not accept in their own repositories.  Their arrogance comes from success, I suppose.  They must be busy people and have little time to worry about the concerns of us little folk.  And when something is changed… it just happens.  Theme and plugin developers are expected to respond quickly and positively, but obviously for no additional reward… it almost feels like the only ones they like to be rewarded for their hard work are those at… Automattic.

Start Showing Some Grace

We’ve provided other resources back to the community - our WP User Manual is free in PDF form, and I do my best to keep it up to date, in spite of the lack of financial reward.

So Spectacu.la and the people behind it put a huge amount of effort into the WP community and our reward for deciding to contribute a professional quality GPL theme with zero strings attached was a one line automated e-mail.

If Automattic continues to treat WordPress developers with such disdain, they can expect to start losing the support of the community.  They need to start treating us all a little better and not expecting that we can all make a decent, passable living from giving our stuff away.  This is even more important now there’s a worldwide recession - money simply isn’t easy to find any longer and debts are no longer tolerated so well by our bankers.  It’s down to brass tacks - we need to survive, and we need to find ways to get paid for what we do.  A bit of publicity from our not insignificant free stuff helps with that.

Linkage:  Received a great link from a webapart to a Gaping Void cartoon.  Is this what WordPress are trying to achieve?  http://www.gapingvoid.com/Moveable_Type/archives/003360.html

Update - Matt Mullenweg has been in touch to say that mistakes may have been made.  It’s not clear how this tallies with the change in policy saying that themes link to sites that support premium themes aren’t allowed… however he does say that if we’re kosher with the GPL and the policy on our site doesn’t attempt to change that (and we always aim to be 100% straight, legal and fair) then it was most likely a mistake.  So in our case we believe that we should start seeing our themes on the repository again soon.  Good, because we’ve got a tasty re-jig of Grassland (called Grassland 2.0 funny enough) which has full WP2.7 loveliness :-)

I need to also add that we’ve been told it’s bad form to conflate Automattic with WordPress.org - although they’re highly interlinked they should be considered separately.  However, given they’re both led by the same person, it’s natural that one will influence the other.

Evening Sun - GPL Theme

A great theme for those looking for a swish WordPress theme that supports the new threaded comments functionality. The theme has a pleasant setting sun design and is designed with the blogger in mind.

  • Widgeted Sidebar
  • Threaded comments support, with javascript sliders to help control unwiedly threads
  • Fireworks source images for easy updating
  • Great for eco blogging, modders and more
  • GPL from day one! For support, join Spectacu.la soon
  • Works with all WP versions from 2.1 onwards including 2.8
Read more
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Anvil - GPL Freedom!

We wrote Anvil because we wanted to contribute something back to the WordPress community. Completely free yet still flexible and full of the high quality code everyone’s come to expect from Interconnect IT. And it’ll get better because like all our themes we commit to supporting future releases of WordPress for at least two years from release.

  • Two widget spaces
  • Graphically intense, yet database light
  • Easy to configure options in the back-end
  • Easy to modify parameterised css
  • Spot for Google Adsense/Banner ads
  • Dark, elegant design
Read more
Theme Preview Demo Download