Posts Tagged ‘WordPress’

WordPress FAQ: Changing Links and Images After a Move

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December 13th, 2010
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WordPress, WordPress FAQs

So, you’ve just moved your WordPress blog following the official instructions, but what about all of your internal links and images? Even though you may have changed your main URL during the move process, your internal links and images will remain unchanged, leaving images broken and internal links pointing toward the old domain or directory. Sure, you could manually edit every single post or page, but there are other ways. The easy way is to use a plugin called Velvet Blues Update URLs. It’s a very simply plugin. You just enter your old URL, then enter your new URL, and this plugin take cares of the rest. I know, it almost seems too easy, but in this case it really is just that easy. Of course, if you want to make it a little bit more difficult, we sure can. What if Velvet Blues Update URLs disappears and you’re left […]

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WordPress Theme Releases for 12/12

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jQuery Mobile is perfect for those who want to make a good looking and easy to read version of their blog and guarantees an optimal ease of reading on mobile devices such as the iPhone, Blackberries or Android. (designed for use with a plugin like WP Mobile Detector) OpenBook is a “magazine” theme with nice features such as column display, news slider and drop-down menu. Red Christmas is a holiday, minimalistic two-column, fixed-width, widget-ready, and seo optimized red theme. Snippet is a Thematic child theme. It is simple, clean, and perfect for developers who want to show some code.

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Andrew Nacin, Full-Time WordPress Developer

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December 11th, 2010
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WordPress, WordPress News

It seems like just last month when we were celebrating Andrew Nacin’s first full year of WordPress contributions.  Like any good athlete with a solid year under his belt, Andrew Nacin has just been acquired, by Matt Mullenweg himself. Nacin now has his dream job. He will be working alongside Otto Wood as a Tech Ninja at Mullenweg’s Audrey Capital. His job? To continue his work as a WordPress core developer on a full-time basis and also contribute to the WordPress.org site, bbPress, BuddyPress, and GlotPress. Nacin has certainly made an impact during his rise through the WordPress community, and we wish him the best in his new adventure.  The future of WordPress certainly feels more secure than ever before.

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WordPress Plugin Releases for 12/10

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December 10th, 2010
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WordPress Plugins

New plugins Ad Injection allows you to inject any kind of adverts into the existing content of your pages, without you having to change your existing pages. CleanAdmin is a clean and relaxing custom admin style. Updated plugins Akismet filters out your comment and track-back spam for you, so you can focus on more important things. All in One Webmaster has options to add Google, Bing, Alexa, Blog Catalog, Yahoo’s Webmaster and Analytics code (meta tags). CleanCodeNZ Exclude Page hides pages from navigation or other purposes using custom fields. DukaPress is an open source and free to use e-commerce platform. DynamicWP Contact Form adds a collapsable AJAX contact form to the side of your site. Facebook Members enables Facebook Page owners to attract and gain Likes from their own website. Ultimate Taxonomy Manager is an easy to use taxonomy manager with a great UI.

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How You Can Support WordPress

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December 9th, 2010
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WordPress

The aspect of community-powered support is definitely one of that factors that has lead to the popularity of WordPress, but despite millions of users, only a handful regularly volunteer in the support forums. How can you support WordPress? What kind of questions will you encounter? What if you aren’t an expert? These just a few of the questions that Automattic Happiness Engineer Sheri Bigelow answers in her WordCamp Portland 2010 session, How to Support WordPress. I became a volunteer in the WordPress Support Forums six years ago, one week after installing WordPress. I was what some would call a “n00b,” but while I was waiting for an answer to my question, I noticed a few installation questions that I could answer. Fast-forward six years later, and everything that I know about WordPress today was learned from answering questions on the WordPress Support Forums. If a lack of knowledge is preventing […]

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WordPress 3.0.3 Security Release

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December 8th, 2010
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WordPress, WordPress News, WordPress Security

Users are advised that WordPress 3.0.3 has just been released and is a security update. This release fixes issues in the XML-RPC remote publishing interface. This release fixes issues in the remote publishing interface, which under certain circumstances allowed Author- and Contributor-level users to improperly edit, publish, or delete posts. If you have remote publishing enabled on your site you are urged to upgrade. You can do so easily via the built-in automatic upgrade feature. If upgrading the old fashioned way is your cup of tea here is the list of revised files … wp-includes/version.php xmlrpc.php readme.html wp-admin/includes/update-core.php

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WordPress Theme Releases for 12/8

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Emporium is a two column theme for WordPress and the eShop plugin. Valentine is a modern style css3 layout, with a fixed header and footer, and embedded fonts.

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How WordPress Decisions are Made

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December 7th, 2010
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WordPress

WordPress is certainly the most popular open source blogging platform, but how are development decisions made? You may have heard that WordPress is a democracy, that Matt Mullenweg makes all the decisions, or that Automattic governs the development of WordPress. Of course, neither of those are true. WordPress is actually a Meritocracy. It’s really quite simple and efficient, but the more you contribute to WordPress, the more weight your opinions carry when it comes time to make decisions. Probably the best example of this is Andrew Nacin. When Nacin began contributing to WordPress, he could only submit his bug fixes and enhancements for review. After showing his commitment to the WordPress community over three months and a hundred patches, Nacin was asked to be a core developer. Now, Nacin’s bug fixes and enhancements go right to the core. I could write pages upon pages describing how everything works, but I’d certainly […]

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One Image Shows The Power Of WordPress

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December 6th, 2010
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WordPress

The fine folks over at Testking.com have created and shared an info-graphic that displays the power of WordPress. The image contains interesting information that can be found within the Codex but has been displayed in a nice, visual form. Notables include: time line of releases and major milestones from 2003 to 2010, web usage of WordPress, percentages of websites using different versions of WordPress, daily user activity and much more. Some of this information seems to be WordPress.com based so keep that in mind. Despite the information at some point being dated, this would still make a great snapshot to use as a poster. The Power of WordPress

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