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Posted by joedolson

Related: #21583.

The main accessibility concern in #21583 is that a user navigating the page reaches Help and Screen Options before discovering what the topic of the page is in the main h1. Exploring a way to modify the header so that the topic is exposed before all the related content would help resolve that issue.

This is separate from the aim to redesign that content, but would instead change the grouping of items on the page so that they would consistently be

Heading > Add New (when relevant) > Screen Options/Help > Other filters/controls > content.

WordPress 6.9 Release Candidate 2

Nov. 18th, 2025 03:26 pm
[syndicated profile] wordpress_feed

Posted by Akshaya Rane

The second Release Candidate (“RC2”) for WordPress 6.9 is ready for download and testing!

This version of the WordPress software is under development. Please do not install, run, or test this version of WordPress on production or mission-critical websites. Instead, it’s recommended that you evaluate RC2 on a test server and site.

Reaching this phase of the release cycle is an important milestone. While release candidates are considered ready for release, testing remains crucial to ensure that everything in WordPress 6.9 is the best it can be.

You can test WordPress 6.9 RC2 in four ways:

PluginInstall and activate the WordPress Beta Tester plugin on a WordPress install. (Select the “Bleeding edge” channel and “Beta/RC Only” stream).
Direct DownloadDownload the RC2 version (zip) and install it on a WordPress website.
Command LineUse the following WP-CLI command:
wp core update --version=6.9-RC2
WordPress PlaygroundUse the 6.9 RC2 WordPress Playground instance to test the software directly in your browser without the need for a separate site or setup.

The scheduled final release date for WordPress 6.9 is December 2, 2025. The full release schedule can be found here. Your help testing RC versions is vital to making this release as stable and powerful as possible.

Please continue checking the Make WordPress Core blog for 6.9-related posts in the coming weeks for more information.

What’s in WordPress 6.9 RC2?

Get a recap of WordPress 6.9’s highlighted features in the Beta 1 announcement. For more technical information related to issues addressed since RC1, you can browse the following links:

Want to look deeper into the details and technical notes for this release? These recent posts cover some of the latest updates:

How you can contribute

WordPress is open source software made possible by a passionate community of people collaborating on and contributing to its development. The resources below outline various ways you can help the world’s most popular open source web platform, regardless of your technical expertise.

Get involved in testing

Testing for issues is crucial to the development of any software. It’s also a meaningful way for anyone to contribute. 

Your help testing the WordPress 6.9 RC2 version is key to ensuring that the final release is the best it can be. While testing the upgrade process is essential, trying out new features is equally important. This detailed guide will walk you through testing features in WordPress 6.9. For those new to testing, follow this general testing guide for more details on getting set up.

If you encounter an issue, please report it to the Alpha/Beta area of the support forums or directly to WordPress Trac if you are comfortable writing a reproducible bug report.  You can also check your issue against a list of known bugs

Curious about testing releases in general?  Follow along with the testing initiatives in Make Core and join the#core-test channel on Making WordPress Slack.

Update your theme or plugin

For plugin and theme authors, your products play an integral role in extending the functionality and value of WordPress for all users.

Thanks for continuing to test your themes and plugins with the WordPress 6.9 beta releases. If you haven’t yet, make sure to conclude your testing and update the “Tested up to” version in your plugin’s readme file to 6.9.

If you find compatibility issues, please post detailed information to the support forum.

Test on your hosting platforms

Web hosts provide vital infrastructure for supporting WordPress and its users. Testing on hosting systems helps inform the development process while ensuring that WordPress and hosting platforms are fully compatible, free of errors, optimized for the best possible user experience, and that updates roll out to customer sites without issue.

Want to test WordPress on your hosting system? Get started with configuring distributed hosting tests here.

Help translate WordPress

Do you speak a language other than English? ¿Español? Français? Русский? 日本語? हिन्दी? বাংলা? मराठी? ಕನ್ನಡ?  You can help translate WordPress into more than 100 languages. This release milestone (RC2) also marks the hard string freeze point of the 6.9 release cycle.

An RC2 haiku

A calm hillside sighs,
Work of many now complete —
RC2 stays true.

Props to @amykamala, @annezazu, @davidbaumwald, @westonruter and @joedolson for proofreading and review.

Say Again?

Nov. 18th, 2025 02:00 pm
[syndicated profile] cakewrecks_feed

Posted by Jen

It's a fundamental fact of life that the more ridiculously off base a misspelling, the funnier it is.

So, "Congradulations?" Not particularly funny. "Controdulatior?" Funny.

And this?

HYSTERICAL.

 

Then there are the times when everything is technically spelled correctly, but...

(I don't know what's happening here, but I "like" it.)

 

I guess we can't judge this next wreckerator too harshly, since "Bon Voyage" isn't actually English; it's French. And we can't expect bakers to know French, now, can we? OF COURSE NOT. So don't even THINK about laughing. Seriously. It's a simple, honest-to-goodness mistake that ANYONE could easily ma...uh.

Oh, dear.

Never mind. 

("Have a nice trip! See you next fail!")

 

Thanks to Deb, Deborah A., & Terye B. for the stop, drop, and ROTFL.

******

P.S. When you don't have a cake to express yourself, there's always this:

"Sorry I'm Late, I Didn't Want To Be Here" T-shirt

That can't be a coincidence that it's in Thanksgiving colors, right? ::evil grin::

Comes in lots more shirt colors and also men's cuts at the link.

*****

And from my other blog, Epbot:

[syndicated profile] wordpresstrac_feed

Posted by davidbaumwald

Editor: Sync packages for WP 6.9 RC 2.

Changes can be found at https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/commits/wp/6.9/.

[Block Bindings: Add unit test coverage for core/post-data source](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73055) [Block Bindings: Error handling for external sources.](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/72585) [Notes: Collapse note on blur](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73158) [Border-radius values triggers unintended px conversion](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73324) [Fix navigation tag entity binding](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73255) [DataViews: ensure primary actions are not wrapped in the list layout](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73345) [Fix: Fit Text may overflow into the padding area.](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73327) [Merge "Icon Size" and "Icon size" translation strings](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73325) [Notes: Improve delete confirm message for replies](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73173) [Fix: Custom font size taking over fit text.](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73241) [Fix a11y of descriptions and alerts for "Invalid" Nav Items](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73177) [Stretchy text: Hide variations in Block Inspector (hack)](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73238) [Update button label from "Add new note" to "Add new reply"](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73189) [Notes: Fix first note creation with pinned sidebar](https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/73164) Developed in https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop/pull/10528. See https://make.wordpress.org/core/handbook/about/release-cycle/block-editor-release-process-for-major-releases/#package-updates-and-core-patches.

Reviewed by davidbaumwald. Merges [61262] to the 6.9 branch.

Props priethor, ellatrix. See #64267.

Canton

Nov. 18th, 2025 01:57 pm
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Mark Liberman

Since Victor recently spent 1100 words on various people's "best approximations of how they think they are saying 'Canton'", "expressed in common spelling (not a phonetic alphabet)", and has resisted requests to provide audio, I thought I'd provide some examples of how a Canton resident pronounces the city's name. As I've explained many times, I don't think that IPA transcriptions are an effective way of representing how people actually talk, and this case will continue to support that view. Instead, a good place to start is a sample of audio clips along with graphical representations of waveforms, spectrograms and other kinds of acoustic analysis — and there are several possible directions to go from there.

I used the YouTube video "Living in Canton Ohio", which starts this way:

Are you wondering more about what Canton Ohio is all about?

Zeroing in on Canton:


The residue of the /t/ is a glottalized region (marked with the red arrow) about 80 milliseconds into the nasalized (and raised) /ae/ vowel, leading into the second syllable which has a brief [ɪ]-like region followed by 80 milliseconds of nasal murmur.

Playing the first and second syllables separately makes what's happening a bit clearer:

The next Canton in that video:

Everything you can imagine I'm gonna try to go over it for you
and give you a truer idea of what Canton is all about

Zeroing in again, we see the same thing as before:

Is the third time the charm?:

First up is what I'm onna talk about is when it comes to living in Canton

It sounds similar to the first two. But zeroing in, we see what looks more like a glottal fricative followed by a syllabic nasal (though again, an IPA transcription wouldn't really tell us what's happening):

There are more Cantons in the rest of that video, and we'd need to look at more of them to get a better sense of the full range of this guy's pronunciations. Victor's informants may well have even more variation — but I don't think that it's very helpful to learn how people try to apply their intuitions about standard English orthography to describe how they talk, unless we also have some recordings to illustrate what they're describing.

cannibal

Nov. 18th, 2025 07:15 am
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
[personal profile] prettygoodword
cannibal (KAN-uh-buhl) - n., a person who eats human flesh or organs; an organism that eats others of its own or similar kind.


(Here’s that pin from yesterday.) Okay bear with me, and not just because, yes, this is stretching things as a food word, as it’s also stretching things as a Taíno word. I mean, we did get it (via Spanish caníbal) from Taíno Caniba, their name for the Carib peoples who migrated from the South American coast into the Windward Islands—but Taíno speakers got it from Island Carib name for themselves, Karibna (lit. “person/people”), which had been retained from the Cariban they spoke when they lived on the mainland, before adopting as their main language the Arawakan spoken by those they’d defeated/displaced. Taíno speakers feared the Caribs as fierce fighters, and passed on to Columbus both their name and their reputation as eaters of their defeated foes. [Sidebar: Said rep was greatly exaggerated.] The word Karibna also became Carib itself, and so named the Caribbean, as well as caribe, another name for piranhas. So, yeah, an endonym that became derogatory.

---L.

Analogy of the week

Nov. 18th, 2025 12:19 pm
[syndicated profile] languagelog_feed

Posted by Mark Liberman

From Dan Fagin, "We Can Now Track Individual Monarch Butterflies. It’s a Revelation.", NYT :

For the first time, scientists are tracking the migration of monarch butterflies across much of North America […]

The breakthrough is the result of a tiny solar-powered radio tag that weighs just 60 milligrams and sells for $200. […]

Most monarchs weigh 500 to 600 milligrams, so each tag-bearing migrator making the transcontinental journey is, by weight, equivalent to a half-raisin carrying three uncooked grains of rice.

Rick Rubenstein, who sent in the link, commented

I suppose "uncooked grains of rice" has some merit, but "half-raisin"? Who has an intuitive sense of the weight of half a raisin? And there's something very funny about the use of "carrying" — how, and why, is this half-raisin carrying these rice grains? Is this supposed to be a relatable experience?

In defense of Dan Fagin, I can only note that the analogy caught Rick's attention and will probably stay in his memory.

I would have thought that a butterfly weighed more than half a raisin, and maybe it would, depending on the size of the raisin.  This site gives a raisin weight estimate of about 1/3 to 1/2 gram, suggesting that a butterfly weighing "500 to 600 milligrams" would actually weigh as much as one or even two raisins. I'll leave it to readers to evaluate the relation of "three uncooked grains of rice" to a 60 milligram radio tag.

 

 

[syndicated profile] wordpresstrac_feed

Posted by ellatrix

fixed:

In 61262:

Sync packages for WP 6.9 RC 2.

Changes can be found at https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/commits/wp/6.9/.

Developed in https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop/pull/10528.
See https://make.wordpress.org/core/handbook/about/release-cycle/block-editor-release-process-for-major-releases/#package-updates-and-core-patches.

Fixes #64267.
Props priethor.

[syndicated profile] wordpresstrac_feed

Posted by ellatrix

Sync packages for WP 6.9 RC 2.

Changes can be found at https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/commits/wp/6.9/.

Developed in https://github.com/WordPress/wordpress-develop/pull/10528. See https://make.wordpress.org/core/handbook/about/release-cycle/block-editor-release-process-for-major-releases/#package-updates-and-core-patches.

Fixes #64267. Props priethor.

AI and Voter Engagement

Nov. 18th, 2025 12:01 pm
[syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed

Posted by Bruce Schneier

Social media has been a familiar, even mundane, part of life for nearly two decades. It can be easy to forget it was not always that way.

In 2008, social media was just emerging into the mainstream. Facebook reached 100 million users that summer. And a singular candidate was integrating social media into his political campaign: Barack Obama. His campaign’s use of social media was so bracingly innovative, so impactful, that it was viewed by journalist David Talbot and others as the strategy that enabled the first term Senator to win the White House.

Over the past few years, a new technology has become mainstream: AI. But still, no candidate has unlocked AI’s potential to revolutionize political campaigns. Americans have three more years to wait before casting their ballots in another Presidential election, but we can look at the 2026 midterms and examples from around the globe for signs of how that breakthrough might occur.

How Obama Did It

Rereading the contemporaneous reflections of the New York Times’ late media critic, David Carr, on Obama’s campaign reminds us of just how new social media felt in 2008. Carr positions it within a now-familiar lineage of revolutionary communications technologies from newspapers to radio to television to the internet.

The Obama campaign and administration demonstrated that social media was different from those earlier communications technologies, including the pre-social internet. Yes, increasing numbers of voters were getting their news from the internet, and content about the then-Senator sometimes made a splash by going viral. But those were still broadcast communications: one voice reaching many. Obama found ways to connect voters to each other.

In describing what social media revolutionized in campaigning, Carr quotes campaign vendor Blue State Digital’s Thomas Gensemer: “People will continue to expect a conversation, a two-way relationship that is a give and take.”

The Obama team made some earnest efforts to realize this vision. His transition team launched change.gov, the website where the campaign collected a “Citizen’s Briefing Book” of public comment. Later, his administration built We the People, an online petitioning platform.

But the lasting legacy of Obama’s 2008 campaign, as political scientists Hahrie Han and Elizabeth McKenna chronicled, was pioneering online “relational organizing.” This technique enlisted individuals as organizers to activate their friends in a self-perpetuating web of relationships.

Perhaps because of the Obama campaign’s close association with the method, relational organizing has been touted repeatedly as the linchpin of Democratic campaigns: in 2020, 2024, and today. But research by non-partisan groups like Turnout Nation and right-aligned groups like the Center for Campaign Innovation has also empirically validated the effectiveness of the technique for inspiring voter turnout within connected groups.

The Facebook of 2008 worked well for relational organizing. It gave users tools to connect and promote ideas to the people they know: college classmates, neighbors, friends from work or church. But the nature of social networking has changed since then.

For the past decade, according to Pew Research, Facebook use has stalled and lagged behind YouTube, while Reddit and TikTok have surged. These platforms are less useful for relational organizing, at least in the traditional sense. YouTube is organized more like broadcast television, where content creators produce content disseminated on their own channels in a largely one-way communication to their fans. Reddit gathers users worldwide in forums (subreddits) organized primarily on topical interest. The endless feed of TikTok’s “For You” page disseminates engaging content with little ideological or social commonality. None of these platforms shares the essential feature of Facebook c. 2008: an organizational structure that emphasizes direct connection to people that users have direct social influence over.

AI and Relational Organizing

Ideas and messages might spread virally through modern social channels, but they are not where you convince your friends to show up at a campaign rally. Today’s platforms are spaces for political hobbyism, where you express your political feelings and see others express theirs.

Relational organizing works when one person’s action inspires others to do this same. That’s inherently a chain of human-to-human connection. If my AI assistant inspires your AI assistant, no human notices and one’s vote changes. But key steps in the human chain can be assisted by AI. Tell your phone’s AI assistant to craft a personal message to one friend—or a hundred—and it can do it.

So if a campaign hits you at the right time with the right message, they might persuade you to task your AI assistant to ask your friends to donate or volunteer. The result can be something more than a form letter; it could be automatically drafted based on the entirety of your email or text correspondence with that friend. It could include references to your discussions of recent events, or past campaigns, or shared personal experiences. It could sound as authentic as if you’d written it from the heart, but scaled to everyone in your address book.

Research suggests that AI can generate and perform written political messaging about as well as humans. AI will surely play a tactical role in the 2026 midterm campaigns, and some candidates may even use it for relational organizing in this way.

(Artificial) Identity Politics

For AI to be truly transformative of politics, it must change the way campaigns work. And we are starting to see that in the US.

The earliest uses of AI in American political campaigns are, to be polite, uninspiring. Candidates viewed them as just another tool to optimize an endless stream of email and text message appeals, to ramp up political vitriol, to harvest data on voters and donors, or merely as a stunt.

Of course, we have seen the rampant production and spread of AI-powered deepfakes and misinformation. This is already impacting the key 2026 Senate races, which are likely to attract hundreds of millions of dollars in financing. Roy Cooper, Democratic candidate for US Senate from North Carolina, and Abdul El-Sayed, Democratic candidate for Senate from Michigan, were both targeted by viral deepfake attacks in recent months. This may reflect a growing trend in Donald Trump’s Republican party in the use of AI-generated imagery to build up GOP candidates and assail the opposition.

And yet, in the global elections of 2024, AI was used more memetically than deceptively. So far, conservative and far right parties seem to have adopted this most aggressively. The ongoing rise of Germany’s far-right populist AfD party has been credited to its use of AI to generate nostalgic and evocative (and, to many, offensive) campaign images, videos, and music and, seemingly as a result, they have dominated TikTok. Because most social platforms’ algorithms are tuned to reward media that generates an emotional response, this counts as a double use of AI: to generate content and to manipulate its distribution.

AI can also be used to generate politically useful, though artificial, identities. These identities can fulfill different roles than humans in campaigning and governance because they have differentiated traits. They can’t be imprisoned for speaking out against the state, can be positioned (legitimately or not) as unsusceptible to bribery, and can be forced to show up when humans will not.

In Venezuela, journalists have turned to AI avatars—artificial newsreaders—to report anonymously on issues that would otherwise elicit government retaliation. Albania recently “appointed” an AI to a ministerial post responsible for procurement, claiming that it would be less vulnerable to bribery than a human. In Virginia, both in 2024 and again this year, candidates have used AI avatars as artificial stand-ins for opponents that refused to debate them.

And yet, none of these examples, whether positive or negative, pursue the promise of the Obama campaign: to make voter engagement a “two-way conversation” on a massive scale.

The closest so far to fulfilling that vision anywhere in the world may be Japan’s new political party, Team Mirai. It started in 2024, when an independent Tokyo gubernatorial candidate, Anno Takahiro, used an AI avatar on YouTube to respond to 8,600 constituent questions over a seventeen-day continuous livestream. He collated hundreds of comments on his campaign manifesto into a revised policy platform. While he didn’t win his race, he shot up to a fifth place finish among a record 56 candidates.

Anno was RECENTLY elected to the upper house of the federal legislature as the founder of a new party with a 100 day plan to bring his vision of a “public listening AI” to the whole country. In the early stages of that plan, they’ve invested their share of Japan’s 32 billion yen in party grants—public subsidies for political parties—to hire engineers building digital civic infrastructure for Japan. They’ve already created platforms to provide transparency for party expenditures, and to use AI to make legislation in the Diet easy, and are meeting with engineers from US-based Jigsaw Labs (a Google company) to learn from international examples of how AI can be used to power participatory democracy.

Team Mirai has yet to prove that it can get a second member elected to the Japanese Diet, let alone to win substantial power, but they’re innovating and demonstrating new ways of using AI to give people a way to participate in politics that we believe is likely to spread.

Organizing with AI

AI could be used in the US in similar ways. Following American federalism’s longstanding model of “laboratories of democracy,” we expect the most aggressive campaign innovation to happen at the state and local level.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser is partnering with MIT and Stanford labs to use the AI-based tool deliberation.io to capture wide scale public feedback in city policymaking about AI. Her administration said that using AI in this process allows “the District to better solicit public input to ensure a broad range of perspectives, identify common ground, and cultivate solutions that align with the public interest.”

It remains to be seen how central this will become to Bowser’s expected re-election campaign in 2026, but the technology has legitimate potential to be a prominent part of a broader program to rebuild trust in government. This is a trail blazed by Taiwan a decade ago. The vTaiwan initiative showed how digital tools like Pol.is, which uses machine learning to make sense of real time constituent feedback, can scale participation in democratic processes and radically improve trust in government. Similar AI listening processes have been used in Kentucky, France, and Germany.

Even if campaigns like Bowser’s don’t adopt this kind of AI-facilitated listening and dialog, expect it to be an increasingly prominent part of American public debate. Through a partnership with Jigsaw, Scott Rasmussen’s Napolitan Institute will use AI to elicit and synthesize the views of at least five Americans from every Congressional district in a project called “We the People.” Timed to coincide with the country’s 250th anniversary in 2026, expect the results to be promoted during the heat of the midterm campaign and to stoke interest in this kind of AI-assisted political sensemaking.

In the year where we celebrate the American republic’s semiquincentennial and continue a decade-long debate about whether or not Donald Trump and the Republican party remade in his image is fighting for the interests of the working class, representation will be on the ballot in 2026. Midterm election candidates will look for any way they can get an edge. For all the risks it poses to democracy, AI presents a real opportunity, too, for politicians to engage voters en masse while factoring their input into their platform and message. Technology isn’t going to turn an uninspiring candidate into Barack Obama, but it gives any aspirant to office the capability to try to realize the promise that swept him into office.

This essay was written with Nathan E. Sanders, and originally appeared in The Fulcrum.

Just one thing: 18 November 2025

Nov. 18th, 2025 06:28 am
[personal profile] jazzyjj posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished!

Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
[syndicated profile] wordpresstrac_feed

Posted by msmcoretech12

https://msmcoretech.com/website-development-company/

WordPress Version: 6.6.1 (latest stable at time of testing)

PHP Version: 8.1

Theme: Twenty Twenty-Five (default)

Plugins: All plugins deactivated

Browser: Chrome 142.0.0.0 (Windows 10)

Server: Apache (shared hosting)

[syndicated profile] wordpresstrac_feed

Posted by maccyd

When the media library is in gallery mode and on the "Edit Gallery" tab, the "Remove" button doesn't resemble a remove button. It resembles an unchecked check box.

To replicate:

Navigate to a page
Insert a Gallery block
Click "Media Library"
Select some images and click "Create New Gallery"
Select the "Edit Gallery" tab

The UI appears as though the expectation is to select images for removal, not that they will be immediately removed.


[syndicated profile] wordpresstrac_feed

Posted by sidatmsm

https://msmcoretech.com/website-development-company/

WordPress Version: 6.6.1 (latest stable at time of testing)

PHP Version: 8.1

Theme: Twenty Twenty-Five (default)

Plugins: All plugins deactivated

Browser: Chrome 142.0.0.0 (Windows 10)

Server: Apache (shared hosting)

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