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How Do You Get Comments To Nest In WordPress?

Thursday, January 26th, 2012
Threaded comments

That is the question I came across not too long ago on a forum. It might seem like such a trivial matter to those more experienced WordPress users but really it may not be as simple as you think. This is why. Sometimes terminology gets in the way so let’s be clear what nested or threaded comments are. These replies to a comment that appear indented under the original comment. It is a great to help you and readers follow a conversation. WordPress integrated this feature into the basic install beginning version 2.7 so it’s been a while and many themes should have caught up by now. However, I know for a fact working with a lot of different people and installs over the years, some of us still use antiquated versions (dangerous) or use themes that are antiquated (just as dangerous). Knowing this, there are three ways you can turn on nested comments in WordPress. Turn It On No, I’m not trying to be funny. There are many many times especially on a site that has been around and using WordPress for a long time. You may not realize the feature is there when you upgraded and simply never looked at

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Screen capture with annotation

Sometimes the solution or the path to a solution is right under your nose. While on the job, one of my friend’s clients asked if she knew of a way to make the photos on her site be displayed it does on iPhoto. This posed a problem because my friend doesn’t use a Mac. There are screen shots all over the Internet of course but that’s still not helpful because from what I understand, there are several ways iPhoto displays them. I don’t have the iPhoto app installed and couldn’t help her either. There are many different screens within the iPhoto app. Which portion is the client talking about? When outsourcing, the old adage “A picture is worth a thousand words” is so true. Many times in classes, interviews, webinars, writing etc, my favorite advise is – “Don’t tell, show“. It’s not just for your sanity. It’s for your team’s sanity too. You can show what you mean by grabbing a screen shot or making a screen recording. Here are some tools you can use. Tools to grab static screen shots: Snagit Screenshot Captor SnapDraw Photoscape Tools to record screen videos: Camtasia (Windows and Mac) Jing (Windows and Mac) Wink (Windows) Capture FOX

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Remove Spam Bait From Your Blog

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012
stop-spam

Today, I received the dreaded email that notifies me of a comment awaiting for moderation on a site where WordPress is used as an opt-in page nothing more. Needless to say this type of site is not one I’m in daily or monthly, sometimes not even in 6 months. I know many people use WordPress like that and it’s great because it is so versatile and there are such wonderfully easy plugins like MarketerCMS and WPSalesletter that make it incredibly easy to put up an attractive, effective opt-in page(s). Unfortunately as I mentioned in my interview with Kelly on Detoxing Your Blog, this is also this type of sites have a huge potential to leave security holes and be spam bait because they aren’t in the forefront of our minds. So save yourself some time. If you’re building an opt-in where you know you will unlikely review the page regularly, get rid of obvious spam baits before you finish the project. Delete, trash or un-publish the Hello World post Close all comments and trackbacks Check individual posts to disable comments and trackbacks If you’re a bit more techie and truly will never need comments, nor trackbacks either rename or remove

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The Importance of Detoxing Your WordPress Powered Site

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012
SoloSmarts

Last week, I managed to jump on a call with Kelly McCausey of SoloSmarts who wanted to talk to me about detoxing a WordPress powered site. Kelly had some fabulous questions such as: Why keep up with updates. Are some plugins no longer necessary? Is my theme hopelessly outdated? How to deal with broken links? How to deal with non-automated spam. This one is tough as most spam filters are good at detected automated spam, not human generated spam. We had a great conversation some good info. Listen in here (nothing to pay). P/S: To expand on plugins that are no longer necessary, here are some I used in the past but no longer because new WordPress features have rendered them unnecessary for our projects. Exclude Pages. We now use the built in WordPress menu feature. Page Links To. This plugin used to help create navigation menus that redirect to outside sites etc without having to edit code. Again we just use WordPress menu. However there are times this is still useful. Plugins to close comments on old posts. This feature is now built into WordPress.

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GQueues

The beginning of the year is usually a time when organizing, creating systems and finding better ways to stay on top of things are at the forefront of our minds. If you’re looking for new ways to help you jump start your year and hopefully keep it on the right path for the rest of the 11 + months, you might want to give these tools (sans Basecamp) a spin. GQueues I so really need to write a full fledged review of this system. When someone in my Google + circle asked about it, here’s what I shared. “I’ve been using it for a few months I REALLY like it, the simplicity, the ease of adding tasks etc. I held off from upgrading before as it needed one premium account for every person you want to share tasks with but now, you don’t.” While they don’t have a dedicated mobile app, they are accessible online via mobile. Mobile is very very important to me and it does not matter if there is an app or not. Actually, I rather prefer not having dedicated apps. GQueues is also very affordable compared to many other tools in this space. That is definitely

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Client Work vs In-House Projects

Monday, January 2nd, 2012
cbc-kelly

This is a continuation of a Cross-Blog-Conversation with good friend Kelly McCausey. She wrote a wonderfully insightful post in reply to my last question. Loved it. Kelly – let’s just say I’m very, very glad to know that you do it despite the anxiety and you do allow yourself time to ache over a project that is going bye-bye. Now I won’t feel so bad when I do! Now on to the question she asked me in return it’s actually two parts so let’s tackle the first part: Part One: So many people rely on you for your tech expertise. How are you going to balance helping others with growing your own business projects in the new year? Years ago, very early in my business, I decided I was not taking in new clients. Looking back, I’m not entirely sure why. That’s how inexperienced I was. All in all, it worked out great. I charged enough to keep money coming in but high enough that I didn’t exactly need a gazillion clients who’d take up all my time. This was great because it allowed me time to give the handful of clients full focus when I was working on their

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Most Helpful Web Development Posts In 2011

Thursday, December 29th, 2011
Thumbs Up

My friend Lexi is a fantastic blogger, often coming up with some of the most interesting posts and I do enjoy her blog – a lot. Yesterday, she inspired me to write a ‘Best of’ post. Instead of focusing on me, I thought I’d share other people’s posts I discovered in 2011 and found extremely helpful. These are ones I refer to many times throughout the year and have them bookmarked or clipped. Note:  Some of these posts are not necessarily posted in 2011 but I only discovered them in 2011. Another testimony why good posts bring you traffic again and again. Pretty CSS3 Button This one is almost 2 years old by now but still very good. I have the code snipped and these buttons make into a lot of my sites. There are a lot of CSS button tutorials but I like this best because it’s easy to understand and edit. WordPress Tutorial – Load The Template You Want It’s one of the best illustrated posts about template_redirect in WordPress. Extremely helpful to me for developing plugins, could definitely be used in themes too. Just a fair note of warning this stuff is pretty geeky. Google Web Fonts

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cbc-kelly

While chatting recently, friend and business partner Kelly McCausey of SoloSmarts invited me to a Cross Blog Conversation. If you don’t quite know what that means, check out her post about it. To kick it off, Kelly asked me this question. Lynette, Why Did You Decide To Focus on Tech? Answer: I’ve always been somewhat geeky. When working at my last job as marketing exec, I hung out with the IT manager a lot. Mostly because he was unlike any other IT guy I knew. He had some really cool ideas how to use technology in our marketing. Then I started this business, with a heavy marketing focus. After all, that’s what I just came from. But a good friend kept asking me to help with the technical aspect and it all just kinda fell in place there. As my knowledge of both tech and marketing grew, I’m finding I like the tech a lot more – sounds like something I should have realized all these years right? And so I trimmed a big, very visible and profitable product early this year that wasn’t quite ‘techie’. I still have the site as part of my funnel it’s great for that,

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Tool bag

Among the most popular request in interviews is to list some of my favorite tools for WordPress. As time goes by and WordPress matures, this is almost a meaningless question. True, there are plugins I use on almost every project but for the most part, they aren’t set in stone every single time. I like to assess the project then use plugins, tools and code according to what fits the project best. In this light, there are many tools we use that are never written about or showcased because they don’t really fit anywhere. While working on a WordPress membership site – our very own TechBasedTraining – it occurred to me this would be a perfect opportunity to give you a peek into the many different tools we choose for a project like this. Kinda like peeking into the toolkit. Ready? Here we go. Plugins Wishlist Member – of course. We don’t always use Wishlist. For this project, Wishlist has been used for 2 years. Since were were updating the site, it was a good excuse to upgrade to the latest version. Backup Buddy – on almost all our sites. Usually for backups but in this case it served double duty. The

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Password

This was sent out to our email subscribers last week but due to an incident that very same week, I feel compelled to post it here for your benefit. You know how you’re encouraged to create secure passwords and you end up with a 5ea11y h@rd 0n3? Yeah… like you’re going to remember that. I know all about Roboform, LastPass and 1Password. Can’t live without Roboform. The down side? I am often *severely* crippled when I don’t have access to these tools. It’s happened a few times. Now, I’ve changed my method. Thanks to a comic of all things, but this is not a joke. It IS secure and easy for humans. Ready? Simply string together a few random words, separate them by a space or some kind of symbol like % ^ or @ – anything. That’s it! For a clearer picture, check out xkcd. Do I still use RoboForm? Absolutely because there’s just too many. For the common stuff this is the method I’m using. Hope you found it helpful. It sure was for me Image by Digital Terrorist