It is amazing that, whenever a ladder match is announced, people automatically think of the Hardys.

Whatever you have as a dream, don't let anyone tell you it can't happen; give it your all.

Life is like a wrestling match: a lot of times, things are looking good, and then something happens, and you're fighting from underneath.

I like Batista very much, and we have been friends in the past.

In 2009, I was on top of the world. It was truly the greatest year of my life, both personally and professionally. In 2010, it was the furthest thing from that. It was the most terrible year of my life, both personally and professionally.

I'm one of those people who want to give back and see other people do better.

I've always gotten along pretty well with people.

Your true friends will tell you what they believe is true.

TNA has had a lot of great periods - Hulk Hogan even came in, but I don't think he was beneficial to TNA. They spent a lot of money on him, but made a lot of mistakes. They should have saved that money for me.

TNA has been extraordinary to me, nothing but professional.

I want to be one of the wrestlers that actually gave back, that actually cared about the industry. That's very important to me.

If I'm going somewhere to work, I'm there to work as hard as I can, put out the best product possible, and help any way I can along the way.

At the end of the day, I'm a SmackDown Superstar.

Technology is best when it brings people together.

I am an optimist, and I believe that people are inherently good and that if you give everyone a voice and freedom of expression, the truth and the good will outweigh the bad.

For me, open source is a moral thing.

One thing about open source is that even the failures contribute to the next thing that comes up. Unlike a company that could spend a million dollars in two years and fail and there's nothing really to show for it, if you spend a million dollars on open source, you probably have something amazing that other people can build on.

Don't think about work in your bedroom or relaxation area.

We're not done yet, but two things WordPress has been able to exemplify is that open source can create great user experiences and that it's possible to have a successful commercial entity and a wider free software community living and working in harmony.

There is no moderator or ombudsman online, and while the transparency of the web usually means that information is self-correcting, we still have to keep in mind the responsibility each of us carries when the power of the press is at our fingertips and in our pockets.

Simplicity can have a negative impact when it's the crude reduction of nuances beyond appreciation: a Matisse presented as a 16-color GIF.

There are two main methodologies of open source development. There's the Apache model, which is design by committee - great for things like web servers. Then you have the benevolent dictator model. That's what Ubuntu is doing, with Mark Shuttleworth.

Sometimes, you have to be frustrated and do something unscalable and a waste of your time to be inspired.

I don't have big ideas. I sometimes have small ideas, which seem to work out.

Jeffrey Zeldman had an astonishing ability to craft a seductive coolness using educated references, dry humor, and retro/organic imagery.

No matter what I do, I always come home to my blog.

I think it's really important for the independent web to have a platform, and to the extent that WordPress can serve that role, I think it's a great privilege and responsibility.

Historically, WordPress has been purely focused on the writing side. However, we're thinking about mobile completely differently, and I think there's a big opportunity to take the community of creators that loves WordPress and deliver an audience to the amazing things they're making.

I do my best stuff midmorning and superlate at night, from 1 to 5 in the morning. Some people don't need sleep. I actually do need sleep. I just sleep all the time. I'll catch naps in the afternoon, or I'll take a 20-minute snooze in the office - just all the time. Our business is 24 hours. Our guys in Europe come online at midnight.

There are 100 million blogs in the world, and it's part of my job as the co-founder of WordPress to help many more people start blogging.

Occasionally, if I'm in a rut, I find changing location helps.

For me, it always comes back to the blogger, the author, the designer, the developer. You build software for that core individual person, and then smart organisations adopt it and dumb organisations die.

There's something very real about helping someone one-on-one.

When you look at things like Flickr and Youtube, they are specialised blogging systems, so why hasn't blogging encompassed that ease of functionality?

I spend a lot of time on forums, and they drive me crazy.

Why are so many companies stuck in this factory model of working?

Quantcast combines powerful web analytics with easy-to-read charts and data.

Environment plays a huge role in my ability to creatively focus and my mood - for better and worse.

Just because someone uses Twitter doesn't mean they shouldn't use WordPress, and vice versa.

It's good to work for someone else. Because then you appreciate it more when you are an entrepreneur.

We focus on two things when hiring. First, find the best people you can in the world. And second, let them do their work. Just get out of their way.

It seems like the web, particularly software as a service, provides ample opportunities for you to flourish economically, completely aligned with the broader open source community.

It's good to be in a role when you can learn something new.

In my brief sojourn in college, my favorite classes were political science because I loved the idea of systems we can set up that benefit society - rules we can put in place that sometimes you run against, sometimes they're painful, but ultimately they benefit the world.

One of my favorite programs that we didn't make is Rescue Time. It runs in the corner of my computer and tracks how much time I spend on different things. I realized that even though I was doing e-mail only a couple of minutes at a time, it was adding up to a couple of hours a day. So I'm trying to reduce that.

If you want to be good at something, you really have to work at it every single day. You have to work hard at the things that are hard. Otherwise you are just treading water.

I was raised Catholic, and I can get incredibly guilty about mistakes.

I think that all services will have downtime. No matter how much you prepare, have redundant systems, or audit, there will periodically be a black swan event that is completely unlike whatever you've experienced before. It even happens to Google!

I like to read first thing in the morning. I'm addicted to the Kindle. I read a lot of business books, because I feel like I should figure out how to be a real businessman before someone figures out that I'm not one. I really enjoy reading classics as well, which I try to work in once every two months.

If you're going to quit your job to focus on an idea, you get overly attached to that idea because you had it, and it's the reason you quit your job. Plus, most ideas are bad.