Tag: open source
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Discovering other WordPress Meetups in Massachusetts
This past Monday I attended the Boston WordPress Meetup and got to listen to Rob Petrin talk about Gutenberg’s development roadmap within WordPress. So far, we’re on a very good path. A lot of new features have been indoctrinated into the system and are providing more options for users to build unique-looking sites.
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Proprietary Rights to Your Digital Content
The social web of today is highly integral to our daily lives. How we share these secondary extensions of ourselves is through digital social platforms. The vast majority of these proprietary platforms harness our activities through threads, forums, and instantaneous feeds. Utilizing our data, to make business and marketing decisions and suggestive social connections. It’s…
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Boston WordPress Meetup Experience
So I don’t remember when the last time I attended a Boston WordPress Meetup was, but it was definitely a time before COVID hit and when Microsoft kept their large amphitheater seating open. We all sat in bleacher-style wood seats while watching the presenters give their talks.
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Disabling WordPress Theme and Plugin Editor Options
As far back as I can remember with the use of WordPress, every admin user has the capability to make changes to the theme or plugins through the Theme File Editor and Plugin File Editor. This is a dangerous access point if a client decides to venture into this section. Historically, and through experience, it…
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Wrangling With WordPress Database Prefixes
About a week ago, I was tasked to migrate a Disaster Accountability Project’s website from Bluehost to Namecheap. Migrations are usually seamless if the provider(s) allow some symbiotic connection between the two. Case in point: when I worked with Educate Radiate Elevate, they moved their server from a UK-based system to A2 Hosting.
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Attending WordCamp Rochester, New York 2023!
As you may already know, I have been a huge fan of WordPress since college. I’ve used the platform since 2008 and have fond memories over the past decade-plus, working on my own WordPress client work or tinkering with projects at an agency.
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Understanding What Point Release Means Within A Development Cycle
The first time I’ve ever heard of this terminology was during a WordPress Meetup event. Developers were discussing the upcoming changes with WordPress 6.3, five days before the initial release. New tools, new user interfaces, and security enhancements that may or may not make it into the production release. I, however, was Googling “point release.”…
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Comparing Simple Theme Builder Options With CMS Platforms
Let’s start by comparing the biggest divisions in website development. The advent of this division started as early back as I can remember around 2008 which was my first experience with anything related to software as a service (SAAS). At the time, open-source platforms such as WordPress and Drupal dominated the field of website development.…
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Monthly Site Audits
After a successful launch of a website, what do you suppose is the first thing you need to set up on your calendar? Reminders, and lots of them! Billing is one of them. Content creation is another. Written blog articles, social media posts, and downloadable content such as pictures, videos, and other various files. All…
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Why I Switched Back to WordPress for Blogging
For the past 10 plus years, I’ve blogged from various platforms in order to experiment with their scalability, and usability. I initially started with WordPress, but as I quickly discovered other content management systems or web publishing platforms, I of course gave them a shot.