Update: We’ve released a new and improved version of this Prologue theme with real-time notification, threaded conversations, and more — we are calling it P2.
We’re fans of Twitter around here, in fact many Automatticians have accounts, but while the format appealed to us it really just whetted our appetite for something more, like a way for each of us to share short messages about what we’re doing or working on internally, or private messages between groups of folks.
So last week Joseph Scott and Matt Thomas decided to tackle this problem and within a few days they had a new theme for us: Prologue. Imagine it like a group Twitter. It’s best demonstrated with a demo:
If you click on the screenshot above, you’ll see a live demo blog with some messages from different Automattic folks. Basically how it works is when someone has the ability to post to a blog they see a short form at the top of the home page with a post box and tags. There they can post short messages about what they’re doing.
Below the posting box is a list of everyone’s latest tweet or message, with their Gravatar next to it. You can click on an author to see all their messages, or a tag to see all of the messages in a given tag (which we use for projects). There are RSS feeds for everything: the entire prologue, each author, each tag, and even combination or searches can be subscribed to in your RSS reader.
You can have a custom header to personalize the Prologue for your group, and just like any WordPress.com blog you have advanced privacy options: the blog can be public, public but invisible to search engines, and password-protected (available only to members).
Just like a blog post, each message in the prologue can have comments, and of course each comments thread has its own RSS feed. (Just like in regular WP.)
As a completely virtual company with no two people in the same place every day, we often have trouble keeping up with each other, so we’re going to be using a password-protected Prologue that only Automattic employees can access as one of our methods of communication, much like some other companies use Basecamp.
Some folks have suggested that using WordPress, Prologue, and RSS you could create a pretty effective distributed version of Twitter. This isn’t something we’re personally interested in, but we’ve made the theme available as open source under the GPL so if you want to hack around it yourself you’re welcome to. For WordPress.com users the theme is available in your “Presentation” section.
The staff was in an undisclosed location outside of Oracle, Arizona last week. I obtained some exclusive paparazzi shots taken by Alex Shiels. Here’s Andy lounging:

Here’s me kicking people’s butts at Wii tennis. 😉

Finally here was our training for spammer-wrangling.


thanks matt 😉 :*
Youth Twitter
I heard about this WordPress Theme that would look like Twitter on Buzz Out Loud earlier, and they weren’t sure of all of the applications. Duh! I’ve been only experimenting very lightly with Twitter in my secondary classroom, because I’ve been worried about not having administrative control over the students’ posts and because of security concerns with other connections they might make. This WordPress theme looks like a really exciting solution! And it has tags which create categories and separate RSS feeds for everything. Wow! Imagine what we could do with this in our classrooms!
http://youthtwitter.com
nice clean theme !
sold !!!
10x, I´m gonna try it in one of my blogs
nice!
I created a custom style for Prologue (just with CSS). Messed with the format a little, I guess I made it a little more Tumblelog than was originally intended.
http://loppl.com/2008/02/02/automattic-releases-theme-that-makes-your-blog-tweet/
Love this! But is there any way to change the “Hi, . Whatcha up to?” text? That doesn’t work for my group at all.
Hi.
Gravatars are dynamically generated based on your registered email addresses. The MD5 hash of an email is used as a unique ID for the avatar image associated with it.
It seems that Gravatar converts emails to lower case, and so for the user accounts on your self hosted WordPress blog you must use lower case for user’s emails.
If you don’t, then you won’t get the right URI for your Gravatar’s images since the MD5 hash changes with the letter case.
At least, changing emails to lower case worked for me.
It’s not a question, nor support request, nor bug reporting, so I thought I’d share it here.
Thanks.
I like the part “buy the google” one
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Wait. How am I supposed to put this on my sidebar?
First of all: thanks Matt and your team! My wife, our kid, my father and myself use WordPress and we like it very much!
I tested Prologue on a subdomain of me for microblogging. First thing I noticed that I can blog on the “front-end”, which saves me the effort to go to the backend, see the dashboard, click to write a post etc. But after the login of course.
So for avoiding to go to the backend at all, I used the “Ajax-Login” plugin to have a widget on the frontend. So now I can go to one place, login and start blogging!
Keep up the good work!
Anybody who’s teach me how to expand my blog? thank you!
Hi Matt!
I’ve just made some slight mods of Prologue over at http://buzz.nextplayground.com/
Look forward for more improvements!
Cheers,
yeeloon