[wp-hackers] XML-based display and spoofing multisite

Alexander Hempton-Smith hempsworth at gmail.com
Sat Jan 15 22:15:48 UTC 2011


I'm also looking into doing the same for a m.example.com site, so
would be interested to see how best to accomplish it.

-- Alex

Sent from my iPhone

On 15 Jan 2011, at 21:38, William Davis <will.davis at gmail.com> wrote:

> I'm sorry I keep asking so many questions — if I'm annoying people please let me know. I have two this time.
>
> My first question is if it's possible and advisable to spoof a multisite instance. The reason I'm asking is because caching plugins don't really work well with mobile sites — you can have caching bypass mobile devices, but then those devices aren't being served cached pages and it doesn't really work that well anyway. So what I'm thinking is to spoof a separate site — for example, m.example.com, and use the same database as the main site but serve a different theme, and that site would be cached as well.
>
> The second question I have has to do with content delivery. I'm intrigued by NPR's open API (http://www.npr.org/blogs/inside/2008/09/creating_the_npr_api_why_did_w.html) and the diagram of how everything works (http://media.npr.org/images/api/architecture_diagram.jpg). I'm curious if anyone has ever tried this approach with WordPress — pretty much generating an xml file of everything in order to reduce strain on the database. It would be great for organizations that want to offer a robust API to others and/or have lots of delivery systems, such as different versions of the site, mobile, tablet apps, etc. What are everyone's thoughts on this sort of delivery system? I'm not advocating WordPress should adopt it, but I'm sure a plugin could be built to offer the functionality.
>
> Will
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