A Rescue Mission for Abandoned Software cover art

A Rescue Mission for Abandoned Software

A Rescue Mission for Abandoned Software

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In 2003, the sudden disappearance of a single developer left a dedicated blogging community stranded, exposing the sheer fragility of the early internet. When the creator of the popular b2/cafelog software vanished, nineteen-year-old college freshman Matt Mullenweg realized the code holding his blog together was effectively dead. Rather than migrate to a restrictive commercial alternative, Mullenweg teamed up with British developer Mike Little to fork the abandoned software. Their initial goal was never to build a sweeping tech empire, but simply to launch a rescue mission for users who just wanted a stable place to write. The result of that makeshift collaboration was WordPress version 0.70, a modest piece of software released in May of that year. While its early interface was strictly text-based and required manual database configurations, it fundamentally prioritized backward compatibility and user control. What started as a patched-together lifeboat eventually transformed into an unprecedented publishing engine. It remains a fascinating piece of digital history that the foundational infrastructure powering a massive portion of the modern web began simply because a teenager wanted to keep his personal blog running. Read the original article: https://medium.com/@dia_91230/a-rescue-mission-for-abandoned-software-eece1bdac074 Subscribe to The Dead Internet Almanac: https://buttondown.com/dead-internet-almanac
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