![]() The “WP updates break things” experience a lot of people have almost always happens when third-party plugins get out of sync with WP’s core and/or each other. I have to say though, if you self-host your own WordPress blog, use the default themes and customize them appropriately to your needs (child theme, colors, etc.), don’t install a dozen complex plugins, and just update everything consistently, self-hosted WordPress is pretty secure and stable.Īnd if it’s only a simple setup (WP core, WP default theme, child theme for customization, one security plugin, one backup plugin), and you just click “update all” every time updates are available, the odds of anything going “boom” are almost nonexistent. Of course, self hosting adds some additional items to address. However, is not free of advertising if you use the free version (you can pay). Over that last few months, I’ve filled it up with HTML shortcuts, auto-replies to emails, tons of things – even does most of my spelling corrections.Based on your views, the default hosted Wordpress isn’t to bad. I started using it for little things like my email signatures, and for that crazy latin that everyone uses for dummy copy on websites. With all of these picks over the weeks, which ones have worked out the best for you? For me, it’s TextExpander by far.
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