You’ve heard about it. Calypso, the WordPress desktop editor for Macs. I’ve been using it and I’m going to give you a quick rundown on what I like and what I don’t.
Like
First of all, it’s Open Source, which is great to look at. Anyone can poke at it and play with it. It’s also a nice GUI to use. Markdown works out of the box if you have it set up in Jetpack. That’s awesome since I’ve gotten very used to using it thanks to Jekyll.
It’s very fast as well, which is great. Fast is good. It also saves rather quickly, even when I’m on some shitty wifi. It’s much faster than using the native WordPress editor.
There have been some bumps in the road, but the development is open to comments and suggestions and steering. Some of the decsions made make sense from every angle except the end users. Users use things in weird ways and, once explained, development seems willing and able to adjust.
Dislike
There’s no spell check. This makes me very sad (I’ve been told it’s a feature request). Clicking back and forth between my sites is a little annoying, and I can’t easily hide sites (or reorder them). There aren’t tabs either, which means I can’t write on three or four posts at once. Yes, I totally do that.
You can’t do Custom Post Types. Yet. This is a deal breaker for one of my sites. Basically I can’t manage my WordPress eCommerce store with this. You also can’t change color schemes. I somewhat wish that it would pick up my user settings and use the profile color from MP6 that I selected there. That way I’d have purple for some posts, green for others, and I’d always easily know where I was.
On the Fence
I don’t really like that it forces me to use Jetpack, but at the same time, the REST API isn’t in core yet, so this makes sense. Similarly, I don’t like that it’s Mac only, but I understand why. Unlike ‘traditional’ software development, the people on the WordPress.com project are primarily Mac users. Of course they went to Mac first. Since it’s open source, I’m hoping someone figures out how to Windows it up soon. Making it Unixy shouldn’t be too hard, since Mac is running Unix.
Back to Jetpack, I would love to see this forked and decoupled from Jetpack, using the REST API instead. Not because I hate Jetpack (quite the opposite) but because I’d like to set my father up with this, and he travels to China where WordPress.com (and Jetpack) are problematic thanks to the Great Firewall.
All in All, I Like It
So far, so good. I like Calpyso and it’s no great effort to remember to use it, unlike pretty much every other desktop app for WordPress. And yes, I’ve tried those.
Comments
7 responses to “Calypso”
A Windows 10 app should be out soon, and there is a linux app in the works, too. 🙂
Just a note to say that we will be releasing a Windows version hopefully this week, and Linux version shortly after. There’s no implied preference in the order of these releases.
We (Automattic) will have Window and Linux builds out sooner rather than later. Just trying to iron out some issues that weren’t hurdles on the Mac build.
I’m excited to see where this (and others forking, building fresh things inspired by this) goes along with the REST API’s bits being added into Core.
Thanks for the feedback!
Yup! https://github.com/Automattic/wp-calypso/issues/306
I added a link to this post as a comment!
Also on the roadmap.
https://github.com/Automattic/wp-calypso/issues/588
That’s a good idea! I created an issue about this here:
https://github.com/Automattic/wp-calypso/issues/1334
We’re working on it! 🙂
You can sign up here to get notified as soon as Windows and Linux versions are launched, or you can ping me and I’ll hook you up. We’re actually looking for testers 🙂
Don’t forget to bring your knees in tight 😉 love the Rocky Horror reference 😀
I did not know that. I’m much more used to Windows (Windows at home, Mac OS at the office) and this single sentence explained a lot of stuff I find weird about some WordPress interface parts. And yes, I’m a bit biased against the mechanics of the Mac OS GUI 🙂
@Floutsch: Go to a Contributor Day at WordCamp and you can count the non-Macs on your hands. It’s pretty funny.