WordPress is a must-install Android smartphone and tablet app for those who frequently use the popular blogging platform, but a few missteps keep it from matching the desktop version's greatness.
We may earn a commission when you click links to retailers and purchase goods. More info. Aspiring bloggers, get into the Google Play store now and download yourself the brand spankin’ new WordPress ...
Yesterday WordPress released version 2.0 of their app for Android. The new version brings welcome functionality and non-suckiness to an app that has been only semi-useful in the past. Aside from ...
WordPress has rolled out a new update for its Android application this week, bringing with it support for both Amazon’s Kindle Fire Android tablet and B&N’s Nook tablet. WordPress for Android is now ...
David is the former Editor-in-Chief of Android Police and now the EIC of Esper.io. He's been an Android user since the early days - his first smartphone was a Google Nexus One! David graduated from ...
WordPress.org today announced plans to drop support for Android 2.3 Gingerbread in its WordPress mobile app. The company explains that Gingerbread usage has been on a steady decline in its app, ...
WordPress has updated its native Android application for smartphones and tablets, delivering features from its version 2.0 update and making them available for owners of Amazon’s Kindle Fire and B&N’s ...
Android: Got a blog? Got a Droid, Nexus One, or other Android-powered phone? Now you can write, edit, moderate comments, and preview your posts and pages with WordPress' own Android application. The ...
WordPress has followed Tumblr’s lead in releasing a much more attractive Holo version of its blogging app (via Engadget) … First and foremost, you’ll notice that WordPress now looks like a proper ...
WordPress, by far, is the most popular blogging platform in the world. It issued a version 2.0 update to its Android application nearly two months after the company debuted the WordPress for iOS 2.0 ...
Eric is a freelance writer and an OG 'round these parts. Since leaving Android Police, his work has been in Lifehacker, The New York Times, OneZero, PCMag, and a bunch of other places. Catch him on ...
Bloggers out there, this is for you. Many of us use WordPress for Android to publish our blog when we are not near our computer. With that experience, we have all seen some of the challenges using it.