Htaccess made easy has 19 ratings and 9 reviews. Mark said: I also have the print edition of this: 832This is an excellent book with tons of.
With each passing day, strong security becomes more important. This article explains some ways to keep WordPress secure while improving the overall security of your WordPress-powered site.
Most of the tips provided here are practice-based security steps that require no plugins or hacks. The idea here is that you don't need to make changes to any code, or modify WordPress in any way in order to maintain strong security. These are security steps that most any WordPress user can use to help protect their site and keep WordPress safe and secure. After months of hard work, I am excited to announce the launch of my new video course on developing WordPress plugins. It covers the entire process of building, securing, and optimizing your own plugins, including 50+ ready-to-go demo files, examples, and plugins. The course is focused on developing plugins using the WP API and Standards.
Covers basics and gets into advanced topics like HTTP API, REST API, and WP Cron. Truly packed with practical examples and techniques to help you create your own awesome plugins. Check it out.
After rocking our site's for nearly four years, it was time for a refresh. Actually complete overhaul is more like it, a top-to-bottom restructuring and streamlining of. Going into the redesign, the goal was twofold: 1) visually keep things as focused and clean as possible, and 2) under the hood, unify everything and simplify down to an absolute minimum. As with any eight-year-old website with over 400 posts and integrated e-commerce system, there was an enormous amount of work required to get the job done. I guess what I was trying to get at with my previous was the idea that a lot of WordPress sites that I see these days are just absolutely trashed in the Admin Area due to and themes.
For users, a few wrong turns when choosing plugins can leave the streamlined, easy-to-use Admin Area an absolute mess of annoying ads and discordant design. So this DigWP post is encouragement for plugin and theme developers to please STOP ruining the WordPress experience with aggressive marketing tactics, endless nagging, and other obtrusive nonsense.
Jeff Starr and I started the journey of writing Digging Into WordPress in December '08 and it's finally for sale. It's 400 pages packed full of WordPress learning.
We go from setting things up, to explaining how things work (really get to know the loop and how to use functions to display the things you need), to SEO, to using WordPress as a CMS, to security, and more! The book gets into it right away, and doesn't waste time with a lot of stuff like the basics of installation that you either already know or can easily find elsewhere. Read on for some more details, as well as a discount code you can use! Demo PDF includes Table of Contents and part of Chapter 3 Discount for CSS-Tricks Readers For the first 10 days, use coupon code DIWCSS during checkout and get $5 off. So the regular $27 is just $22 if you grab it during this launch period. PDF Now, Print Later This is a PDF version of the book for now.
Print will be coming later. Anybody who buys the PDF now will get a a fair discount on the print version if you want to pick that up later. Both are going to be very cool. I love print, but the PDF is pretty ideal as all the links are active, you can search it easily, and you can copy and paste code!
A Lifetime Subscription Buying the book now gives you a lifetime subscription to the book. We intend to keep the book updated and add new content as time goes on. This won't become a stagnant old outdated book. When we release a new version, you'll automatically get an email to download the new version. Affiliate Program If you like the book and want to help sell it, you can earn money doing so. For the PDF right now, we don't have the substantial costs that are printing, handling, and shipping.
So, we are offering 50% of all affiliate sales. Hey, you are doing the legwork, and we appreciate it.
A Peek Thank You Thanks in advance to anybody who picks up a copy. It goes a long way toward helping both me and Jeff create all the other free content we love to share. Hottest Book, and I mean that literally. I have some funky widget installed on my Mac to monitor laptop metrics.cpu, memory, etc. It also monitors the temperature of different components. On average the temp will show at around 50 degrees, assuming charger being used.
So, to get to the point, I clicked on the download pdf button, turned away to grab a coffee, turned back and.whoa.my fan is sounding like it’s running a marathon and my temp has jumped to 72 degrees. Exploding battery time methinks. So, hmmm, what’s up? I exit the download page, notice the temperature falling back to 52 degrees within 30 seconds. How could a PDF download (that wasn;t a download btw) cause that?
Answer, I guess, it didn’t, but it got me curious. So, for fun, I tried again 30 minutes later. Resting point was 50 degrees. In less than a minute I am at at 74 degrees. Click out and back to 50. It would seem that Digging for WordPress, which I am sure is a great book, is a little too hot for my MacBook’s good.
That’s a shame. It’s all in a day’s work.