Archive for November, 2006

11/30/2006 ↓

  • WP Theme: Moonlight

    WP Theme: Moonlight Two column, ultra simplistic, elegant, white on gray theme for Wordpress with some nice touches. (0)
  • Pulitzer for Blogs?

    Pulitzer for Blogs? Now blogs can be submitted as entries for the famed Pulitzer Prize though it sounds as if newspaper blogs will get the most attention since the Pulitzer is aimed at Newpaper Journalism. (2)

11/29/2006 ↓

  • WP Plugin: TDO Mini Forms

    WP Plugin: TDO Mini Forms Add a small form to your Wordpress blog via which unregistered users can submit drafts for post to your blog. I developed something very similar for another project but the concept can be very kludgy. Once the post has been published, if an email address is provided, the user is notified. (2)

11/27/2006 ↓

No inner blogger? Don’t bother! 4comments

Author: Mark Ghosh Category: Blogging Essays, General

Thanks for visiting! If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to our RSS feed. This blog posts regular Wordpress news, updates of themes, plugins, ideas, hacks, quick fixes and everything about blogging, especially about Wordpress. Go ahead, subscribe to our feed! You can also receive updates from this blog via email.

This is the second entrant in The Blogging Essay Contest from WeblogToolsCollection.com If you would like to participate, please email me your entry at mark at wltc dot net. Please rate this article using the star system below. The competition will be judged primarily on the input from readers like you. Thank you.

This is written by Andy from The Spicy Cauldron.

Unless you have an inner blogger, don’t bother, wrote Emily Bell in the November 27 edition of The Guardian. It’s good advice for the Conservative leader David Cameron, whose attempts to instigate viral cyberspace campaigns, including the now-notorious WebCameron, are woefully misconceived, laughable and vaguely sinister.

Bell’s basic argument is that nothing rings true of what the Tories are doing online to try to engage the yoof vote, and I for one agree with her. Presumably the Tories’ big idea is that all those just about ready to cast their first-ever votes are sat in front of computers all day, and can’t wait to engage with political material on the Web. Yummy.

Of course, while it may be true that many of our young people spend far too much time in sedentary non-activities, the rest of us outside Tory (and very likely New Labour) circles know they are far more likely to be downloading music without paying for it using P2P filesharing software, chatting inanely on MSN Messenger or, mostly but not exclusively the boys, downloading porn to address their 24-hour, 7-days a week itch. Sex is, after all, for nearly all teenage boys and a significant number of adult men, the most-often thought-about subject matter from waking to sleeping (and then in their dreams). It’s probably something parents think a lot about too, worrying about their daughters becoming teen mums, although the Internet has never, to date, got any young girls pregnant, and provides opportunities for safer sex education when used responsibly by guardians and teachers.

By the time a young man gets to the age of 15, I seriously doubt well-intentioned parental safeguards such as cyber-patrol software or voluntarily self-rated blogs can come between them and pictures of naked ladies (or men). I suspect that while many of our schoolchildren leave school with rudimentary reading, writing and mathematical skills at best, those same kids can run circles around their parents when it comes to breaking the shackles placed upon the inner workings of computers.

Bell notes the ways in which Cameron’s cybernautical adventures simply don’t ring true:

While the technology and jargon is all there, the true intent to engage isn’t. Hence Cameron’s videos, blog posts, etc, never veer into the realm of the conversational. They never refer to sources outside Cameron or point to material he’s seen or read, or link to people he’s talked to. It is a one-way diatribe of not-quite policies.

No. That would be far too risky. The basic dilemma for politicians is that the online environment is toxic to their usual antics on TV and radio. While they can do quite well spinning their lies and distortions on BBC 1’s Question Time or during five-minute news programme slots, their tactics become more transparently contrived and false when trying to implant their messages into forums such as YouTube. The public can only stomach so much propaganda, and the more it tries to be subtly invasive, the more we recognise the danger of it, and feel ever-more insulted that politicians would rather snare our support covertly than address the real pressing issues of the day.

Not only that, but very few adults, let alone young people, willingly type the addresses of political parties’ websites into their browsers. If we do, we know full well that we’re not getting to get truth, or fun, or come away having learned anything positive. Instead, we come away from such sites depressed if we weren’t depressed already.

We know what we’re going to get for exercising our fingers in this way is gloss, spin and very little substance. None of the three main political parties in the UK - or any for that matter - have enthusiastically grasped the notions of interactivity, open commentary and overall engagement with the public via their websites. It’s too risky a strategy. Adopting the standard blogger’s approach would make it easier for the people to make their views known, and that would never do. Many of our views would be unpleasantly truthful, highlighting just why there is such a massive gap between politicians and the people.

Those of us who have ever had cause to write to our MPs know just how convoluted a process it is, even via email, and that often we don’t get replies or the responses we do get do nothing to address the questions we raised with our elected representatives in Parliament. Letters and emails encourage the natural tendency these days on the part of politicians to obfuscate, to rattle off the party lines and give nothing of themselves away. Distance is maintained, as it is with the conventional websites our politicians present to us.

We get shop windows when what we want are drop-in centres.

Some brave politicians blog. Some less-than-brave politicians blog but don’t allow comments to be left on their sites, or when they do, moderate them to ensure only visitors who are on message with the party faithful get to see their comments appear. It is a brave politician indeed who, like the majority of bloggers, allows open commentary. We can, of course, allow them some leeway when it comes to spam or abusive messages - these are, after all, the bane of most bloggers’ daily lives when it comes to maintaining their sites.

Embracing a medium does not mean just copying a format, it means understanding the rules of engagement.

It’s interesting to note that while you can leave comments unmolested on blogs run by The Guardian, if you leave a comment on blogs run by the Daily Mail, they won’t appear straightaway and sometimes don’t appear at all. You’ve got one of the most important differences between left- and right-wing right there. The only problem is, the public don’t know these days for certain what the overall political leanings of our leading parties are, because they go out of their way to hide them. Labour has long been ashamed of association with the left, while the Tories are now ashamed of their right-wing tendencies and try to keep them under wraps. We get told everyone is centrist. What the heck is that? It does nothing to prevent the right-wing excesses of our current government.

Neither the Tories or Labour are centrist. It’s a lie put out to comfort us, to make us think nobody wants to rattle the cage, disturb the status quo. But life is all about change. We can’t navigate a central course. It’s an impossibility. We are veering to the right while those steering the ship keep telling us our course is true, and straight. Our government and official opposition can both be likened to an errant supermarket trolley, always going off to the right no matter the direction we really want to go in.

Many politicians fear exposing their personalities truthfully online because while they may engender positive views of themselves among the public, they also risk the media attacking them for being honest and real, and a queue of fellow politicians will be lining up to condemn them in the hope of trashing their political views and credibility among their peers, for whom the desire to be credible only extends to the outer territories of Whitehall or local council offices, and so the idea of what constitutes credibility to this breed of people is very different to what the public has long demanded, and needs for confidence to be restored.

There was a time when mass media was young, the public largely in awe of the magic of radio and television, believing without question what was reported in newspapers because, well, journalists belonged to an honourable profession. They were truth-seekers, we thought, often putting their lives at risk to dig up the truth. Right the way through to the dawn of the Internet, or Information, Age, politicians had an easier time of it persuading the public as to what to think, and how to act on the messages being delivered to them. When exposed, the machinery of the press swiftly brought them down and so some kind of equilibrium was maintained.

Of course, while most journalists were sincere seekers after truth, there were always those who weren’t. And their numbers have grown. Just take a look at Fox News, the much-maligned US TV channel which is available to view, if you really must take a gander, on Sky TV here in the UK. The public has learned over time to become more media-savvy, growing wise to how everything from film edits to camera angles can be used to support lies and make them believable. We recognise that powerful men own the newspapers, TV stations and radio channels, using them to promote their own ideas on what is right and what is wrong.

Invariably, these men are viciously judgemental, power-hungry enemies of government by the people, for the people. Why? Because that kind of government, when truly operated, doesn’t bring in the money as much as the current arrangements do. The unholy alliances between these men, multinational big businesses, and politicians are well documented in many countries. They refuse to recognise that the jig is up, that their secrets are, to some extent, out - if only with regards to how they operate, if not yet what they’re actually up to behind closed doors. Time will tell.

Blogging has proved itself but one tool, albeit a vital one, that can be put to effective use in exposing political scandals and hypocrisy. It is no wonder that exceptionally oppressive states, like China, react to the blogosphere by seeking to block most of it being accessed from within their borders. Nothing scares major- or minor-league tyrants more than honest and unfettered criticism being available for all to read, comment on, and draw conclusions from.

And so more and more of us stopped believing, and started questioning, even scoffing at those who once had our respect - journalists, politicians, even the police. While technology has never been a greater risk to our civil liberties than it is today, with ID cards, blanket CCTV surveillance across the country, electronic tagging and more, in parallel to all these scary developments we have learned how to decode and rationalise the messages pumped into our homes, cars, offices and shopping malls. We tut with disgust when we stand at urinals where, as captive audiences, we are subjected to ads on small LCD screens for loan companies and cars. We turn away from the same screens now appearing at supermarket checkouts, petrol pumps and incorporated into window displays. We skip through ads on TV using our fast-forward buttons. We laugh at how bad things have become when we see sponsored dramas coming out of the US where lead characters open up laptops clearly branded with the Apple logo, or, in the case of one of the newest shows called A Town Called Eureka, Cisco Systems.

We think, if we have to pay for TV subscriptions, if we then have to handle ad breaks where the volume goes up several decibels to make sure we can’t avoid the messages if we pop into the kitchen to make a cup of tea, if we then have ads for the next show slicing the end credits in half down the screen, and, on top of that, have actors brandishing branded goods or cameras zooming in on the latest hardware, what next? Pointing arrows to tell us how much we can get this or that for, and where to buy? Actors pausing mid-drama to remind us who the sponsors are?

The more we pay, the more we are subjected to advertisements, copying restrictions, impositions as to what playback devices we can use with certain filetypes. Those of us paying a premium for HD TV boxes often find we are more restricted when it comes to making and saving recordings than those people who are content to stick with VCRs and tape.

Those of us with any sense switch off, physically or mentally, or learn the wisdom of recording the shows we want to watch rather than enduring the constant interruptions when watching anything at the time it is broadcast. We learn we can get news from so many sources online that there’s really not much point buying a newspaper unless we really want the DVD film they’re giving away with the latest issue.

The very last thing we want to do is add to the advertisement overkill in our lives by willingly visiting propagandist political websites or searching the likes of YouTube to watch Cameron’s latest jolly wheeze. Bell is quite right: if you have no inner blogger, don’t bother. I would extend that by saying, if you have nothing new to offer, don’t bother. If you can’t give us honesty and policies that aim to improve the lives of everyone, don’t reach for that webcam and don’t try to be hip and trendy when we never, ever, see you out of a suit - or when we do, you’re still wearing the kind of attire that goes down well at Oxford and Cambridge.

If you want to join in the online revolution, you’ve got to start presenting us with truly revolutionary ideas - and making promises you will keep - on how to stop the rot in the real world. Coming up with those ideas, making those promises, requires no technological support whatsoever. What’s needed is a person of good conscience, political conviction, and intelligence. From current and past evidence, neither David Cameron nor Tony Blair - nor Gordon Brown - fit the bill entirely. Intelligence? Yes. Political conviction? Maybe. Good conscience? I really don’t think so. That is surely indicated by the presence of persistent honesty and integrity, and I see no signs of either in mainstream British politics.
You can read the entirety of Emily Bell’s rather astute article here.

11/25/2006 ↓

  • WP Themes: Kalina

    WP Themes: Kalina A bunch of general purpose two column Wordpress themes with a variety of uses. I like the Christmas theme on the blog but I could not find a download for it. (7)

11/24/2006 ↓

Blogging: The Not-So-New Trend 11comments

Author: Mark Ghosh Category: Blogging Essays, General

This is the first entrant in The Blogging Essay Contest from WeblogToolsCollection.com If you would like to participate, please email me your entry at mark at wltc dot net. Please rate this article using the star system below. The competition will be judged primarily on the input from readers like you. Thank you.

This is written by Joseph from Vibetechnology.com.

Probably thanks to MySpace’s confused contribution to the world, these days even “normal” people have heard of blogging. Blogging allows amateurs to freely publish information and manage sophisticated online, two-way communication with readers around the world.

But, blogging isn’t just for geeks and aspiring musicians anymore. Businesses have jumped on the bandwagon and use blogging as a fluid way to gauge and manage customer sentiment.

Blogs also tend to be a compliment - and in some cases a complete replacement - to traditional online customer support.

So how can blogging help your business?

Use A Blog For Your First Website

While blogs are often only one aspect of a company’s web presence, I’ve noticed another pleasant trend: blogs as a starting point for businesses. Despite the lack of structure - or maybe because of it - blogging is helping expand website creation beyond its techie origins.

Blogs are making it easier for non-technical people to get involved.

Recently, I’ve helped a few folks build their first websites using WordPress. In one case, a mortgage broker wanted to manage an online petition to improve local cell service near his house, while subtly announcing to his neighbors that he’s available for any financing they may need.

Because of the intrinsic database capabilities and open-ended user community support, a blogging platform was a natural environment in which to build him a website.

With one day’s work we built a survey application using GaMerZ’s WP-PostRatings Plug-in, displayed results in an interactive Google map with Ravi Dronamraju, Andrew Turner and Mikel Maron’s GeoPress Plug-in, and for fun, added voice messaging capability via Mark Jaquith’s Evoca Browser Mic Plug-in.

New voice messages send instant emails to him as they occur.

Blogs Are A Ready-Made Database Application

Not long ago, building a “data-driven” website could only be accomplished by well-funded companies. This was partly due to the immaturity of web-based application development, but also because there were too few standards for connecting web pages to databases.

HTML was originally designed to be a set of simplified document markup tags, not a programming language.

HTML was (and mostly still is) too primitive to build sophisticated applications like user management and dynamic data presentation. Connecting web pages to data with any sort of intelligent behavior was performed entirely through primitive CGI programs, which consisted of brittle, unmanageable, and expensive-to-maintain server-side code that didn’t accomplish much.

Nowadays, powerful scripting like that provided by JavaScript and PHP, coupled with open-source databases like MySQL have given rise to more free tools than you can count. Blogs are one such tool!

Choosing A Blogging Platform

If you’re interested in creating your website with a blog, you’ll need to get familiar with the options. The good news is that nearly everything discussed here is FREE (DIY solutions obviously require that you buy machines and/or server space somewhere).

Choosing a blogging platform is like investing in the stock market: How much time are you willing to spend?

There’s no harm in trying everything, provided you have the time.

Hosted vs. Do-It-Yourself Solutions

You will do a little technical work in any case, but there are many free and low-cost hosted solutions available out there that eliminate nearly all of the “geekery” for you. Those who want fine control and extensibility will want to investigate DIY options like the WordPress product we use here on VibeTalk.

Hosted Solutions

For those who don’t want to spend a lot of time managing the operation, there are dozens of free services that will host your site. Here are some of the most common:

  • WordPress.com
  • TypePad
  • Blogger

MySpace-Like Hosted Services

In addition to pure blogging services, a number of big names have jumped into the fray with MySpace-like offerings that include photo managment and shared lists. Their designs are intended for an overall community focus.

  • MSN Live Spaces
  • Yahoo 360
  • LiveJournal
  • Facebook

Do-It-Yourself Solutions

For those who need maximum power and extensibility, I’ve written a brief summary of each of these DIY solutions:

  • WordPress
  • Drupal
  • Movable Type

Popular Hosted Solutions

Hosted solutions are less configurable than DIY, there are capacity limits and your users will most likely have to endure some manner of advertising to offset the provider’s costs. However, the big advantage is in time savings, cost savings, and reliability.

By avoiding the complexity of server software setup, you can focus on the content.

WordPress.com

Summary: WordPress.com is based on the wildly successful DIY WordPress platform we use for VibeTalk. It includes commonly-used extensions like Akismet spam protection as well as backup and import/export utilities. I was able to upload the entire VibeTalk site to the demo site within minutes!

15-20 additional functions are available through a drag-n-drop “Widget” interface that eliminates any manual coding. You can also choose from nearly 50 different themes and allow up to 35 named users/subscribers.

Readers aren’t required to be subscribers, but allowing accounts provides a fine level of privacy control. If you need more capacity, you can upgrade to unlimited users for a one-time fee of $30.

For an additional one-time fee of $15, advanced users can also modify the site’s CSS code for fine-tuned styling.

Finally, when you’re ready to go “pro”, the service will even let you link your own domain names to the site (so, I could make http://www.vibetechnology.com/vt point to this new site, if I wanted). WordPress.com is the pick of the bunch, as far as I’m concerned.Test Site: http://vibetalk.wordpress.com/
WordPress Home Page: http://www.wordpress.com/

Typepad

Summary: TypePad is another popular hosted service that comes in three low-cost flavors: Basic for $4.95/month, Plus for $8.95/month and Pro for $14.95/month. You can test it out for free for 30 days and receive a two month discount if you pre-pay for a full year.

Based on the Moveable Type platform from Six Apart, TypePad has many years experience in providing multi-user blogging services. The interface is excellent.

Users can choose from 43 themes and over a whopping 60 “widgets” in 13 different categories.

Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to easily import data, so the test site is empty, but I’ll try to decipher the format over the next few days and see how it works (I’m interested in some of the widgets for media, like Pandora).

Note, I started the demo on 11/21/06, so if you click on the link after the 30-day demo expires, it may not be there.

Test Site: http://vibetalk.typepad.com/
TypePad Home Page http://www.typepad.com/

Blogger

Summary: Blogger is a free hosted environment that’ll have you up and running in minutes, with 32 available themes and built-in AdSense advertising capability. Overall, it’s a little too primitive for my tastes - there’s minimal extensibility and any major change requires that you “republish” the site.

Test Site: http://vibetechnology.blogspot.com/
Blogger Home Page: http://www.blogger.com/

Other Types of Services

In addition to pure blogging services, a number of big names have jumped into the fray with MySpace-like offerings that include photo managment and shared lists. Their designs are intended for an overall community focus.

  • MSN Live Spaces
  • Yahoo 360
  • LiveJournal
  • Facebook

While great for personal blogging, I suspect most won’t be using these as business sites. Facebook is the oddball of the bunch in that it is more focused on business connections and reminds me a lot of LinkedIn.

MSN Live Spaces

Summary: Formerly MSN, now part of the “Live” products, Live Spaces provides simplified registration by allowing users to register using an existing Passport/Hotmail account.

Test Site: http://vibetalk.spaces.live.com/
MSN Spaces Home Page: http://spaces.live.com/

Yahoo 360

Summary: Yahoo 360 is another social network service that integrates nicely with your existing Yahoo account profiles. You can immediately see other Yahoo members using the service that are in your address book or chat list.

Test Site: http://360.yahoo.com/vibetalk/
Yahoo 360 Home Page: http://360.yahoo.com/

Live Journal

Summary: Another service based on Movable Type, LiveJournal is one of several offerings from Six Apart, the inventors of blogging. LJ is a simplified social network with the usual acoutraments.

Users can choose from three service options, including Paid for $2/month, Plus (free), and Basic (free).

Test Site: http://joeloew.livejournal.com/
LiveJournal Home Page: http://www.livejournal.com/

Facebook

Summary: Facebook is quite a bit different from other offerings in this group. Although it is a well-rounded social service, the focus seems more business oriented. Be sure to check out LinkedIn for pure business connection management.

Test Site: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=509203182&hiq=joe%2Cloew
Facebook Home Page: http://www.facebook.com/

Do-It-Yourself Solutions

When you get into true DIY solutions, things get decidedly more involved. The advantage, of course, is that you get complete control and virtually unlimited extensibility. WordPress and Drupal are free and open-source. Movable Type provides an unsupported free version for personal use only. All three are well-supported by community developers.

The following blurbs should give you insight into each, but are not exhaustive reviews. However, because I have personally setup several WordPress environments, I’ve commented with a bit more depth on the platform’s usefulness…

WordPress

Summary: In the past year, WordPress has steadily climbed to be one of the (if not the) most widely-used blogging platforms. Because of its grass-roots, open-source approach, it’s difficult to accurately gauge just how many developers, users and extensions there are out there - but it’s vast.

Every time I think I might want to write a plug-in extension, I find that someone (indeed, sometimes more than one person) has already done it. You want geo mapping? Done. Flickr photo integration? Done. Del.icio.us tagging? Skype phone integration?

Done and done, ad infinitum.

Suprisingly, with all this power, installation and initial setup is amazingly easy. WordPress provides the famous “5 Minute Install” that will have you up and running in two steps. That is, provided you have the basics in place.

Installation requires an HTTP server like IIS or Apache and a recent version of PHP. If you are starting from scratch, in all likelyhood, you will need to set aside a day to make it all work right.

Once you’re done, though, extensions and maintenance are so easy you’ll be tempted (like me) to forego the usual precautions of developer staging and make direct edits to your production site. Don’t. :-)

WordPress is also available in a multi-user version called WordPress MU, for those who intend to provide a hosted service like those listed above. Guess what? It’s free.

VibeTalk is one modest example of what you can do with WordPress, and here are a few more to illustrate just how far one can go with it.

The Apple Blog ordered list ZDNet Techblogs

And finally, hot off the presses - WordPress has just inked a deal with KnowNow to provide a true enterprise solution called KWEE. For details, see WordPress Takes On SixApart With Enterprise Edition And Wordpress.com.

WordPress Home Page: http://www.wordpress.org/

Drupal

Summary: Drupal is differentiates itself from the other two choices by providing a more holistic “content management” solution, of which blogging is only a part. The platform evolved what was essentially a discussion forum to a multi-function, highly extensible collaboration environment and is now in version 5 of the series.

Some of the major reference applications are still more like threaded discussions than blogs, but if you’re up for the customization challenge, you can do just about anything with it. Here’s one excellent example: Project Opus.

For a list of how others use it, visit the case study page: http://drupal.org/cases.

Drupal Home Page: http://www.drupal.org/

Movable Type

Summary: Based on the very first blogging platform by SixApart, Movable Type is the most seasoned choice of the three. Like WordPress, MT appears to have evolved considerably and provides countless 3rd party extensions for all manner of popular functions.

For the database, MT has better support - MySQL and Postgresql out of the box and extensions for advanced programmers to connect to other data sources.

Reviews of MT invariably cite the product’s power and programmability, but tend to blast it for its complexity. Another reported disadvantage is that administrators must perform a seperate publishing step to make content changes visible. Of course, the biggest disadvantage of MT is that it is not open source and requires a stiff license fee for professional use.

One of the more prominet examples of what you can do with MT: About.com.

Movable Type Home Page: http://www.movabletype.com/

Summary

When I first discovered blogging, I have to admit I didn’t think much of it. It is wholly unstructured and not a little confused with new terminology. In fact, I initially built VibeTalk as a way to experiment with MoodSense and ultimately prove that blogging was not a very good way to share information.

However, after a year, I have to begrudgingly admit that I’m hooked on the concept, if only because it has made building a professional-looking website a no-brainer. The more I learn, the more I like it.

As you wade through the many options, perhaps considering your first foray into the digital realm, maybe you too will find blogging tools useful. These ten choices should get you started. Good luck and let us know your feedback and opinions!

Further Reading

  • WP theme: iAriejan

    WP theme: iAriejan Two column, simplistic, bold, striking, white or dark black theme for Wordpress with AJAX commenting and support for reflection (wetfloor) effect. (0)

11/23/2006 ↓

  • WP Theme : Flowery

    WP Theme : Flowery Two column, flowery (as the name suggests) theme for Wordpress with flowers everywhere including the background and the header. The theme is two column and narrow with lots of pink. (0)

Technorati Link Count Widget 1comment

Technorati Link Count Widget Add a link count or a “Blog Reaction” link to your posts from Technorati. This gives you a way to display the number of links to your posts, as tracked by Technorati in real time. I had something like this in the past in the form of a plugin but it bit me back when Technorati was either slow to respond or was down for the count. You can see it at work on this blog but I believe that this will degrades better than the plugin I had. Installation is relatively simple, though not a drag and drop and requires some addition of code. I am not sure if there is a Wordpress plugin out already for this. Here is the Technorati Blog post from Tantek. Michael suggest that this might even replace trackbacks for him in spite of the issues he mentions.

  • WP Theme: Tiju

    WP Theme: Tiju Three column, white on dark grey with orangeish edges theme for Wordpress with a top menu and lots of space for sidebar type stuff. (0)

11/20/2006 ↓

  • WP Plugin: Kottke Style Archives

    WP Plugin: Kottke Style Archives Arrange your archives in a list just like Jason Kottke. Did I ever mention I really like Kottkes theme? I am reading it on my 21 inch monitor, flipped vertically and it looks just delicious. (3)
  • WP Plugin: Commenter Spy

    WP Plugin: Commenter Spy Geo-locate your commenters using GeoTool and this plugin. Looks like GeoTool is hosted on a cablemodem so its longevity might be suspect. (3)
  • WP Plugin: Target Adsense

    WP Plugin: Target Adsense Target AdSense is a plugin for WordPress that helps you employ Google ad section targeting. Section targeting allows you to suggest sections of your text and content that you’d like to emphasize or downplay to Google Adsense. When used correctly, ad section targeting can give you more control in matching the best ads to your site’s content. Installation is relatively simple and the configuration of the plugin allows you to choose specific portions of your post to target ads to. (0)

KnowNow WordPress Enterprise Edition 0comments

Author: Mark Ghosh Category: Blogging News, WordPress

KnowNow WordPress Enterprise Edition Toni spoke with MacManus about the collaboration between Automattic and KnowHow that developed into KWEE. KnowHow will market KWEE to their existing enterprise customer base and will also make it available for hosting on customers’ servers. The product will be shipped with Akismet (not sure about the remote component) and a stats package and any enhancements that the Knowhow folks will make to Wordpress will be released back as Open Source. Link to Toni’s blog post announcing the collaboration and some of the explanation behind it.

11/19/2006 ↓

  • WP Theme: Apple

    WP Theme: Apple Three column, rounded edge, clean, clear, colorful theme for Wordpress with an Apple color scheme. The color scheme is extracted from a photo of an apple. (1)
  • WP Theme: Styled

    WP Theme: Styled Hybrid one and two column, very modern, highly functional theme for Wordpress with built in features such as Live Search, AJAX commenting and a “growl popup system build under jquery and json”. Not sure about the growl popup system, but everything else looks very polished. View the demo here. (0)
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