Author Archive

WordPress 2.7 beta 1

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

WordPress 2.7 is on the way and today I uploaded the beta1 version of the new release to this blog.

The upgrade went well and everything on the blog seems to behave as before. Plugins are still working, widgets are still displaying, theme is hanging together fine.

There’s a new dashboard interface which will take a bit of getting used to but an exciting new feature is the ability to have a sticky post on the front page.  This means you can have one post at the top of the page and all subsequent posts will scroll below it.

I haven’t yet explored all the new gizmos but what I do know is that I’ll have to redo my WordPress tutorial (again!) as soon as WordPress 2.7 gets released in full (sigh).

Read more about 2.7 here:

http://wordpress.org/development/2008/11/whats-your-favorite-thing-about-the-27-beta/

WordPress.com versus WordPress.org

Friday, October 17th, 2008

What’s the difference between wordpress.com and wordpress.org?

Wordpress.com is a free blog platform, hosted by WordPress. You can have a totally free blog as a subdomain on their server. Your blog’s URL would be xxxxxx.wordpress.com where xxxxxx is your chosen username. The advantage is that it’s free and you have a wide choice of themes (designs) and blogging tools that you can choose from. The disadvantage is that you can’t monetize it: they don’t allow you to put Adsense on it and they can close you down if you have money-making or business links on your blog. And another downside is that you don’t own the blog - they do. They can remove your blog at will if you do something that is against their terms of service.

WordPress.org is the self-hosted version of WordPress. The software driving the blog is free but you have to pay for a domain and hosting service. This doesn’t cost megabucks and is essential if you are running any sort of business. The advantage of this is that the blog URL is your own domain that you registered. And you can pretty much do what you like on your blog: have Adsense, sell your own product(s), have affiliate links, plugins, banners, whatever you like. You own the blog - it’s your property and you could even sell it.

WordPress For Families

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

When you think about WordPress blogging you maybe imagine a hinterland of obsessed loners, hunched over their keyboards, typing into the night, unloved and unseen.

Well, it ain’t necessarily so. Let me tell you a story.

I have a friend, let’s call her Liz,  who recently did me a big favour and, when I insisted on doing something in return, she said I could teach her blogging. Now, although I immediately agreed,  I privately had my doubts. Here’s a (let’s be polite) mature lady with no great love of computers and an impatience with anything that is too technical.

She explained that she wanted to start a blog to keep her family in touch. She has four children in three countries and they have given her six grandchildren who, because of their parents’ businesses, travel frequently. She wanted each member of the family to be able to post their news and photographs and for other members of the family to comment on them. And she wanted this blog to be private: she didn’t want it indexed in the search engines, she wanted it accessible only to her family.

Fine. WordPress will let you do all of that, but I imagined a long learning curve for this total, untutored newbie :-( . So, I printed out a copy of my free WordPress tutorial and took it round to her house.

We sat down at her computer and I guided her through the first few pages of the ebook. She did exactly what it said although she confessed total incomprehension at first. But, after we had been through the process of creating her WordPress account and selecting the theme, she began to see what was going on. With a little bit of help from me she made her ‘About’ page and she typed up and published her first post. And, we added a picture.

To my amazement, when she saw what she’d done, she immediately ‘got it’. We were soon going over to the section where you can set up authorised users and she added her sons, daughters and grandchildren.

Then, with a little bit of help from me, she emailed all her family with instructions on how to get their own WordPress accounts so that they could log in and contribute to the blog.  She instructed them all to download my tutorial and work through it. They are used, I am sure, to doing exactly what she tells them!

I left them to it. I kept in touch with her by phone and she called me a few times over the next few days to let me know how they were getting on.

The first to come on board was her son in Australia. He put up a lovely post with some pictures of his horse taken from his phone. And his young daughter added an account of how she had done in her gym class. Dad added a photo of her in her gym kit. And granny replied back with news of her old horse. And she put up another picture she had taken at Christmas of another grandchild with a face painting.

I was impressed.  But I was even more impressed the next time I went to see her and she showed me their blog on her computer. All by herself, she’d uploaded one of her photos and made it into the blog’s header! It looked totally beautiful and her family had all contributed to their unique blog, free of charge, keeping them all in touch from around the world.

Families can be together in a blog even when they are thousands of miles apart. Distance is no barrier. WordPress works for families as well as the web-geeks!

This is a true story.