Dave Winer has shared a few things here about his WordLand (wordland.social) project, which he’ll be demoing live at WordCamp Canada next month.
WordLand timeline demo by Daveβ―Winer
WordLand is more than just a proof of concept. Itβs an actively developed, distraction-free, browser-based editor for publishing to WordPress via a lightweight RSS/JSONβbased protocol.
- It functions as a real posting frontβend to WordPress, offering its own RSS feeds. You can write in Markdown or HTML, and your content can be syndicated outside WordPressβso it supports building an ecosystem of front-ends and aggregators (scripting.com).
- It includes a new looselyβcoupled protocol that enables collaborative editing between apps (e.g., WordLand and the Bingeworth editor), not hard-wired to specific apps .
- As Manton Reece describes, the goal βis to bootstrap something new β a social network without all the problems of Twitter,β centering on control for writers and openness (manton.org).
- Early adopters like Preben Ormen and Andy Sylvester confirm itβs fully functional for composing, uploading images (though some metadata like featured images/tags require WordPress UI), and publishingβdescribing the experience as βgreatβ and distractionβfree while acknowledging some early-stage polish is missing.
- Dave’s take on WordLand’s goals:“Itβs not so important what you do in this context — itβs how you do it. Thatβs the news. Writers matter.Β Weβre going spend the next few years making writing for the web a lot easier and much more powerful.“
β So: What Is WordLand?
| Aspect | Status |
|---|---|
| Proof-of-concept | In many senses, yes β it’s early-stage, with core features in development rather than a polished release. |
| Fully functional app | Also yes β people are using it daily to publish posts, manage timelines, and interact with WordPress. |
| Incubator for a broader ecosystem | Absolutely β the protocol is open-ended, aiming for multiple apps to interact via RSS/JSON and build new tools. |
In short, WordLand isnβt just a prototype. Itβs a real, working editor with real use, but its value lies in its role as a foundation for experimentation, community building, and an open ecosystem. Itβs both a practical writing tool today and the first step toward something bigger tomorrow.
Want to explore using WordLand yourself or dive deeper into its protocol/API? Start here. (this.how/wordland/) Dave can help you set it up or point you to support and docs.
Join us at WordCamp Canada!
Get your tickets, bring your curiosity, and join us in Ottawa this fall for an unforgettable celebration of WordPress, community, and the open web! π
ποΈ Tickets are on sale now, and we’ve secured discount rates for you at area hotels. π¨





Comments
One response to “What is WordLand?”
This is the best explanation of this project so far – now I’m interested in this keynote! π