WordPress is powering 14.7% of the top 1 million websites in the World. With around 30% of all websites now using WordPress, you are not alone.
What I have learned today
A selection of articles to help website owners and developers
Reducing the number of WordPress Revisions
There are plenty of options available if you want to limit the number of WordPress revisions stored on your website. Here are a few suggestions.
Resolving 403 issues with Amazon S3
Find out more about Amazon S3 and why it can help improve your website performance.
Google Web Fonts for your WordPress Site
Ever wondered how some WordPress websites get to display lovely fonts? Take a look at our post to discover how to add Google Web Fonts to your website.
LinkedIn, Twitter and Hootsuite – stage 1 of ‘Stepping up my Social Media activities’
I have been trying to kick-start my Social Media activities after attending a Social Media Workshop: LinkedIn, Twitter, Hootsuite. Here is a little overview of what I have done so far.
Stepping up my Social Media activities
I value the importance of social media (LinkedIn, Twitter, etc) and also blog regularly on a number of different sites., but I feel I should do more. How do I step up my social media activities?
Best ways to install WordPress
What options are available for installing and running Wordpress? How do you choose between running it on the wordpress site, running it standalone on your computer and running it on your own (or a hosted) web server? What pre-installation checks should you do?
My WordPress scheduled post didn’t publish on time
What do you do when your WordPress scheduled posts fail to publish on time? You may want to consider a couple of plugins that can help deal with this issue.
Problems with WordPress’ Flipping Book plugin?
The Flipping Book plugin allows jpg and png files to be combined into an online book producing proper paging effects, such as a swishing movement when pages are turned.
You are handling your WordPress spam, aren’t you?
If spam is spoiling your blog, check out Akismet, a great WordPress plugin that traps spam comments. It lets you trap, review and even delete these comments automatically.










