I have not tried WP3. Nor have I jumped on the EE2.0 bandwagon yet…
But WordPress is growing, and I think I like others should start to take it a little more seriously.
I am sure both have different purposes, approaches, and I still think that you choose the right tool for the right job. but…
EE is getting more expensive - whether it be by licenses, or addons. I mean just adding the basics:
EE $250, Wygwam $35, Matrix $35, Playa $75, BetaMeta $40, Structure $65, SolSpaceUser $100.
Now before i am flammed - i know you do not have to buy these, and only bigger sites need something like Solspaces User, but the $250 license is doubled on some of these must have (just search peoples blogs posts and some agree with me!) extensions.
I also know that free alternatives will popup - especially for WYGWAM and Structure, BetaMeta is not 100% needed, etc, etc.
But with WP jumping into this region smaller low budget sites are less likely to be justified on the purchase costs. Idiot proof updates for WP is something clients love - they feel powerful and in control. Hacking WP is minimal if kept up to date - if you do not, then you know who is responsible!
For me the killer blow is the templating - and that illustrates best where EE and WP differ. EE assumes nothing, expects you to know something, and gives you great powers. I find that WP assumes a lot and mostly because of the pre-made templates. But this is changing and if WP becomes more complex, will it lose its current userbase? Or will the base model work for idiots, and the powerful features come out for those that know more…
As above WP is a’ changin’... And the comparisons on here are becoming more and more fanboy’ish for both sides - but people are slowly beginning to question things more than ever before.