Well, yesterday evening was a sad day for the world as we marked the passing of Steve Jobs. I consider myself a huge Apple fan and own just about every product they make. I have been fascinated with Apple computers since the first time I worked on one. I saw a piece of hardware and [...]
New Video Training Series
As we noted last week with the launch of WordPress there are a few simple little interface tweaks that make it lighter and faster.
We are now offering with all new projects free 30 day access to our extensive video training series (see screenshot below). The video library is kept updated automatically when versions or features change. We also include special video tutorials for site specific features or plugins. As an added bonus we include a written manual for the non-visual learners out there. If you are interested please send us an email and we will be happy to add the feature on to your site for a free trial period. As always with every website project we still provide our personal and in-depth training before site launch.
Thanks,
Daniel Kedinger, Owner/Lead Geek
WordPress 3 Released
Not many updates to WordPress have gotten me so excited as the most recent version. WordPress 3 has really amped up the CMS factor with many new features that previously were achieved with 3rd party plugins. Most of the functionality that I added onto my client’s websites are now built directly into the core of the system. I have been working on a few new sites that are close to launch that are built from the ground up with WordPress 3. There are over 1,217 bug fixes and feature improvements, I will spare you all the geekery and only highlight a few here.
Custom Post Types
This feature expands upon the standard “post types” of posts, pages, and attachments. It gives users the ability to create a new section to categorize data. When this feature is implemented into a website it can really be tweaked to what ever dataset that needs to be displayed. The main examples used by WordPress to explain the functionality are things like a real estate listings, a podcast directory, or a book/movie database. But really you could do anything with custom post types. For instance you could use it to display store locations with address information, descriptions and more.
Menu Manager
This is a feature that I have included in many websites with the use plugins for quite a few years now, but it is finally a part of the core system. This allows users to create and modify their menu systems on the fly. If you want to have categories in the menu as well as pages you just drag and drop and you are good to go. It also allows the ability to make links that can point to other locations. This helps free up the need to create dummy pages with redirects.
Multi-Site Functionality
Previously this feature was known as WordPress MU, but it as well as been integrated directly into the system. WordPress 3 now lets you very easily manage multiple WordPress sites with one install. Another feature that when used correctly can be very useful. For instance a shopping complex that has one main website with multiple sub sites for each individual business, allowing individual control to all the users for their own site, but still connected and hosted in one location.
Other Features
There are countless features and many security fixes, way too many to note here. But they also did many little interface tweaks that help make things less cluttered and easier to just get in and write. If you host your site yourself make sure to update, you will be happy. As always we are ready to go with WordPress 3 and have already been playing in the sandbox with it for quite a few months. You can get more information on the new features here and for the geeks amongst us more details here.
Beautiful and Easy Content Management
Content Management Systems are a dime a dozen these days. Every PHP designer with any teeth probably has made one or another to prove they can make a kickass CMS! Usually though, these CMSes are horribly difficult to use, are closed box systems, and force people to get locked into their proprietary technology. The BIG reality is that there are only a handful or so that are actually usable for clients. My clients across the board need something that is web based, easy to use, and doesn’t require a Computer Science degree to manage.
I have tried my fair share of open source CMSes and have generally one complaint about all of them, they aren’t user friendly. This is usually tied to the fact that some PHP programmer designed the system and user interface with little to no help from graphic designers.
Enter WordPress.
I couldn’t find a better way to describe it than the main quote from their website.
“WordPress is a state-of-the-art publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability. WordPress is both free and priceless at the same time.”
I have been using WordPress for all of my sites for about 3 years now and will never look back. It has everything a guy couldn’t want and more! To save you and me time, I am just going to list out the pros and cons. I will let you decide.
Pros
- FREE! FREE! FREE!
- widely used and developed (Ford, Yahoo, eBay, CNN, New York Times)
- highly extensible (thousands of plugins available)
- easy templating & well documented (php based & the WordPress Codex)
- very user friendly (if you can use Microsoft Word you are good to go)
- did I mention FREE! (Open Source)
- you can get a completely free blog to get started (WordPress.com)
Cons
- still makes blogging the main UI focus
- no caching out of the box







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