Slides from the Wordpress 101 workshop (morning session) at the Canadian Association of Labour Media Conference (CALM) in Hamilton, Ontario - May 26th, 2012
Drupal powers many small-to-medium websites, from personal blogs to company intranets. Drupal also powers big sites like The Economist and The White House. How are the big sites different from the small ones? What are the main issues to consider when adopting Drupal for the enterprise? What skillset do developers need to build them?
The document provides information on WordPress including what it is, its advantages, and how to set it up both on a live site and locally. WordPress is an open source content management system that is free, easy to use, and customizable. It allows for blogging and incorporating social media. Setting it up involves installing WordPress files, creating a database, and configuring settings. The WordPress admin interface allows managing posts, media, pages, comments, appearance, plugins, users, and settings. Themes and plugins can be installed to customize WordPress functionality and design. Standards for theme development include using valid code and following WordPress coding conventions.
Drupal is a powerful and flexible platform to build websites with rich funcionalities without building almost anything from scratch. This flexibility brought by the usage of a powerful framework and the work of a super active community can abstract people to understand what is Drupal doing behind the scenes.
Most of performance talks regarding Drupal focus on aspects like infrastructure changes, caching strategies, and comparison of performance between modules or platforms. Unfortunately when performance problems occur, development teams also follow several strategies to replace several aspects in their platforms, jump directly to look for slow queries before trying really to understand where is the bottleneck.
However, most of the times what really needs to be done is to look to what the application is doing and understanding why is it taking so long to do it. Drupal is a platform used by million of websites worldwide and its performance is easy to measure and compare.
At Acquia we have done dozens of performance assessments, and even if we usually face the same problems, sometimes we found weird situations that are only possible to be detected when measured. Measuring and profiling is the only way to understand performance problems in a site and provide valid fixes.
In this talk I will explain how to detect problems regarding performance in Drupal, using simple modules like devel, profilers like XhProf and looking to logs to understand the impact done on the application.
WordCamp NEO 2016 presentation "Custom Responsive Theme Workshop" by David Brattoli
While we could use many different frameworks, premium and free themes to build our sites, I have found you need a truly custom framework to build a base to build new themes quickly to meet your project needs. This method to create a framework and then to create a child theme for the look of the site, will allow you build future sites quickly and efficiently. The session will cover why we choose this method and framework, the challenges we faced, how we tackled the challenge, and what we ended up building to solve the problem. I'll also reveal the pitfalls we discovered and how we overcame those as well.
Coding samples can be found here:
http://bit.ly/wceno-crtw-samples
Responsive Web Design using ZURB FoundationSolTech, Inc.
This document discusses responsive web design using the ZURB Foundation 5 framework. It defines responsive web design and its benefits over adaptive, mobile-first, and native app approaches. It outlines the key concepts of the Foundation grid system, responsive images and media, media queries, and customizing Foundation. It also provides resources for UI development tools and testing responsive designs.
Getting started with CSS frameworks using Zurb foundationMelanie Archer
This document provides an introduction to using the Foundation CSS framework. It discusses downloading and installing Foundation, which is a collection of stylesheets, HTML, and JavaScript files that can be used to quickly create flexible web page layouts using responsive design principles. The document walks through building a basic two-column layout with Foundation, adding rows, columns, and sample content to the header, main content area, and footer sections. It also covers making changes to the framework's styling and integrating other CSS frameworks.
- The document introduces WordPress, a free and open-source content management system that can be used to create beautiful websites or blogs.
- It provides an overview of installing WordPress and getting started, including buying a domain name and hosting plan, installing WordPress manually or using one-click installation, and learning the basics of posts, pages, media, and settings.
- Additional sections cover customizing WordPress through the use of themes, widgets, plugins, and tips for optimization including search engine optimization and social media integration. The workshop aims to teach both beginner and advanced WordPress skills.
This document provides an introduction to WordPress, including its history and features. Some key points:
- WordPress is a free and open-source content management system (CMS) released in 2003 that powers over 60 million websites.
- It allows users to easily create and manage blogs and websites without needing advanced technical skills or coding experience.
- WordPress has a large community that contributes thousands of plugins, themes, and support options to extend its functionality.
- It is one of the most popular CMS platforms along with Joomla and Drupal, but WordPress is noted as being the easiest to use and having the most extensive library of plugins and themes available.
Drupal powers many small-to-medium websites, from personal blogs to company intranets. Drupal also powers big sites like The Economist and The White House. How are the big sites different from the small ones? What are the main issues to consider when adopting Drupal for the enterprise? What skillset do developers need to build them?
The document provides information on WordPress including what it is, its advantages, and how to set it up both on a live site and locally. WordPress is an open source content management system that is free, easy to use, and customizable. It allows for blogging and incorporating social media. Setting it up involves installing WordPress files, creating a database, and configuring settings. The WordPress admin interface allows managing posts, media, pages, comments, appearance, plugins, users, and settings. Themes and plugins can be installed to customize WordPress functionality and design. Standards for theme development include using valid code and following WordPress coding conventions.
Drupal is a powerful and flexible platform to build websites with rich funcionalities without building almost anything from scratch. This flexibility brought by the usage of a powerful framework and the work of a super active community can abstract people to understand what is Drupal doing behind the scenes.
Most of performance talks regarding Drupal focus on aspects like infrastructure changes, caching strategies, and comparison of performance between modules or platforms. Unfortunately when performance problems occur, development teams also follow several strategies to replace several aspects in their platforms, jump directly to look for slow queries before trying really to understand where is the bottleneck.
However, most of the times what really needs to be done is to look to what the application is doing and understanding why is it taking so long to do it. Drupal is a platform used by million of websites worldwide and its performance is easy to measure and compare.
At Acquia we have done dozens of performance assessments, and even if we usually face the same problems, sometimes we found weird situations that are only possible to be detected when measured. Measuring and profiling is the only way to understand performance problems in a site and provide valid fixes.
In this talk I will explain how to detect problems regarding performance in Drupal, using simple modules like devel, profilers like XhProf and looking to logs to understand the impact done on the application.
WordCamp NEO 2016 presentation "Custom Responsive Theme Workshop" by David Brattoli
While we could use many different frameworks, premium and free themes to build our sites, I have found you need a truly custom framework to build a base to build new themes quickly to meet your project needs. This method to create a framework and then to create a child theme for the look of the site, will allow you build future sites quickly and efficiently. The session will cover why we choose this method and framework, the challenges we faced, how we tackled the challenge, and what we ended up building to solve the problem. I'll also reveal the pitfalls we discovered and how we overcame those as well.
Coding samples can be found here:
http://bit.ly/wceno-crtw-samples
Responsive Web Design using ZURB FoundationSolTech, Inc.
This document discusses responsive web design using the ZURB Foundation 5 framework. It defines responsive web design and its benefits over adaptive, mobile-first, and native app approaches. It outlines the key concepts of the Foundation grid system, responsive images and media, media queries, and customizing Foundation. It also provides resources for UI development tools and testing responsive designs.
Getting started with CSS frameworks using Zurb foundationMelanie Archer
This document provides an introduction to using the Foundation CSS framework. It discusses downloading and installing Foundation, which is a collection of stylesheets, HTML, and JavaScript files that can be used to quickly create flexible web page layouts using responsive design principles. The document walks through building a basic two-column layout with Foundation, adding rows, columns, and sample content to the header, main content area, and footer sections. It also covers making changes to the framework's styling and integrating other CSS frameworks.
- The document introduces WordPress, a free and open-source content management system that can be used to create beautiful websites or blogs.
- It provides an overview of installing WordPress and getting started, including buying a domain name and hosting plan, installing WordPress manually or using one-click installation, and learning the basics of posts, pages, media, and settings.
- Additional sections cover customizing WordPress through the use of themes, widgets, plugins, and tips for optimization including search engine optimization and social media integration. The workshop aims to teach both beginner and advanced WordPress skills.
This document provides an introduction to WordPress, including its history and features. Some key points:
- WordPress is a free and open-source content management system (CMS) released in 2003 that powers over 60 million websites.
- It allows users to easily create and manage blogs and websites without needing advanced technical skills or coding experience.
- WordPress has a large community that contributes thousands of plugins, themes, and support options to extend its functionality.
- It is one of the most popular CMS platforms along with Joomla and Drupal, but WordPress is noted as being the easiest to use and having the most extensive library of plugins and themes available.
This document summarizes the services and expertise offered by Acquia, a Drupal consulting firm. It discusses Acquia's Drupal and open source expertise, software industry experience, and the Acquia Network which provides Drupal support and optimized hosting. It also introduces the author and describes services like Drupal jumpstarts, workshops, audits, on-site consulting, and balancing custom and contributed code. The document emphasizes best practices in areas like content and display architecture, security, performance, infrastructure, maintenance, and deployment to help clients maintain a high-quality Drupal site.
The document discusses the power and flexibility of WordPress. It explores unique frontend experiences, customized backend publishing experiences, and themes and plugins. It debunks common myths about WordPress and highlights examples of complex sites built with WordPress, including Twitchy.com, Blondie.net, LifeAndTimes.com, UniversalSports.com, Rhode Island Energy, and eMusic. It also discusses popular theme libraries and plugins like Gravity Forms, WooCommerce, bbPress, and BuddyPress.
Deploying distributed software services to the cloud without breaking a sweatSusan Potter
The document contains the output of multiple "finger" commands run on the user "susan". It shows Susan Potter is logged in from tty1 and has been on since 1997. It also lists her home directory, shell, and social media accounts. The remaining content discusses the scope of a talk and covers various DevOps and cloud computing topics at a high-level, including delivery models, characteristics, definitions, deployment pipelines, bottlenecks, and automation approaches.
The document discusses the Lift web framework. It describes Lift as being tremendously secure, highly interactive, and very friendly to designers. It also notes that Lift enables successful large scale web deployments, as sites like Foursquare and The Guardian use Lift to serve millions of pages daily.
This document provides an overview of using WordPress as a content management system (CMS) for building websites. It discusses CMS concepts and selecting a CMS. It focuses on WordPress, providing an overview of its features and benefits. The document outlines a 7 step process for building a WordPress site: 1) plan the site, 2) install WordPress, 3) set up WordPress, 4) select a theme, 5) install plugins, 6) do SEO, and 7) add content. It provides examples for planning and setting up a hypothetical site for an Oklahoma City disc dog club.
Oxford DrupalCamp 2012 - The things we found in your websitehernanibf
The document discusses various issues found on a website during an audit. It describes symptoms of problems with content architecture like duplicate content types and unused fields. It also outlines issues with site architecture such as custom modules that are not well designed or reusable, unnecessary complexity from unused features, and basic security vulnerabilities around outdated software, permissions, and injection attacks. The document provides guidance on how to further investigate and address these problems.
Learn the basics of building WordPress themes. This presentation is appropriate for people who are somewhat familiar with PHP and databases.
To Learn More, check out http://techliminal.com
This document outlines a workshop on building custom responsive WordPress themes. The workshop will be led by Joe, a self-taught web developer with 17+ years of experience including 5 years working with WordPress, and David, a web developer with 2+ years of WordPress experience. The topics that will be covered include why to build a custom theme, available responsive themes, the basic framework for a responsive theme, theme building tips, and a code demo.
Page loading performance, also known as front-end performance, refers to how quickly a web page and all its components (CSS, JS, images) load. It is important for Drupal sites because users expect fast sites and Drupal powers many large, international sites. The document discusses tools for measuring performance like YSlow and Jiffy and provides an overview of optimizations that can be made to Drupal like enabling CSS/JS aggregation, leveraging a CDN, and putting JavaScript files at the bottom of pages. It also outlines challenges and potential solutions discussed in the author's bachelor thesis around CDN integration and relocating JavaScript.
There is new slide for this at http://www.slideshare.net/catchinternet/contributing-to-wordpress-theme-review-at-wordpressorg
Guide to Start WordPress Theme Review. Useful for WordPress Theme Developers, wannabe WordPress Theme Developers and wannabe WordPress Theme Reviewer
BASIC Wordpress content management training August 2014Brenton Johnson
This document provides an overview and introduction to using Wordpress for content management. It discusses what Wordpress is, the different components, and costs involved. It also outlines what will and will not be covered in the training, including how to add and manage content but not administrator functions. The goals of the training are to understand the basic building blocks of Wordpress and be able to operate a blog using Wordpress. It then goes into detail about the different content types, categories vs tags, and hands-on demonstrations of publishing content and using various Wordpress plugins.
Service-Oriented Design and Implement with Rails3Wen-Tien Chang
The service implements a RESTful Users web service with Rails 3. It customizes Rails to remove unnecessary components and optimize for a lightweight REST service. The service follows best practices for API design including using JSON format, placing JSON conversion in the controller, and returning appropriate HTTP status codes. Requests are designed to be stateless and atomic. Errors are returned in a standardized JSON format.
This document provides an overview of a Drupal training covering various topics from September 12-20, 2014. The training will introduce participants to core Drupal concepts and components including nodes, content types, taxonomies, views, panels, modules, themes, and the database layer. It will cover setting up a development environment, installing Drupal, configuring the system, and extending Drupal through custom modules and themes. Participants will learn how Drupal handles user requests and its event-driven hook system. The document also provides contact information for the trainer.
One Drupal to rule them all - Drupalcamp Londonhernanibf
Dries famous sentence (http://buytaert.net/one-drupal-to-rule-them-all) is becoming a reality for many organisations from small shops to the enterprise space. More and more stakeholders are following the idea of standardising their online presence in Drupal and leverage the same code and infrastructure amongst their different sites. What they are seeking is a drastic reduction in the time needed to create, launch and configure a Drupal site at the same time that they reduce the maintenance effort of the whole sites' network.
To achieve it, a drastic change needs to happen on the standardisation of development processes, more strict control of the overall architecture while supporting new changes and requirements, and repeatable and trustable deployment process to avoid the opposite pitfall of "one site to break them all".
In this session we will look to what needs to be thought when creating such an architecture from the development process to the infrastructure to host the different environments needed. We will look at different solutions that allow maintain these sites factories and walk you through several architectures explaining their advantages and differences.
Finally, we will look in detail to Acquia's Cloud Site Factory, a fully-hosted SaaS solution that allows organisations to quickly deploy and manage websites by the hundreds. Pre-define site templates, create new sites in a single click, manage roles and permissions across sites and connect to existing analytics and data systems.
Front End page speed performance improvements for DrupalAndy Kucharski
If you are a developer or business manager with responsibilities over your website, then check out this deck..
What will you learn?
The webinar, created by our Founder and CEO, Andy Kucharski, is a highly accessible, information-rich review on the ways Drupal site performance can be radically improved. Some of the main topics we will cover include:
What is slow site speed?
What tools to use to diagnose it.
Plus six key improvements to make Drupal “run fast!”
And if that’s not already enough, we will also share some best practices monitoring tips for making sure you know how the Drupal server is performing 24/7.
A walkthrough of various application performance tuning tools and a good workflow for where to start, from a presentation at WindyCityRails 2011 in Chicago, IL.
See the video, and more Web and Ruby/Rails Performance info at www.RailsPerformance.com
-John McCaffrey
This document reviews the presentation sharing website SlideShare. It discusses SlideShare's sign up process, how to upload and edit presentations, features like adding audio tracks or hosting online meetings, supported file formats, and conclusions on the pros and cons for both free and paid versions. Key limitations of the free version noted are presentations always being public and a small file size limit of 20MB.
The document discusses best practices for developing websites using WordPress. It covers using WordPress as a content management system and blogging platform. It also summarizes using WordPress features like custom post types, custom fields, options API, transients API, and interacting with APIs. The document advocates following WordPress standards and using its built-in functions over directly modifying code or adding custom tables. It provides resources for learning more about WordPress development.
This talk was initially delivered at the Melbourne WordPress User Meetup. With tens of thousands of choices for WordPress users and developers, choosing the right theme is an important decision to make when working on any WordPress project. Theme choice impacts on not only design and UX, but also usability, accessibility, performance and more.
This document outlines 15 ways to improve WordPress security, including:
1. Choosing a hosting provider with strong security features rather than just price
2. Enabling automatic background updates for security releases in WordPress versions 3.7 and higher
3. Regularly updating plugins, deleting unused plugins, avoiding duplicate plugins, and checking compatibility before core updates
This document summarizes Shanta R. Nathwani's WordPress 101 presentation at WordCamp Minneapolis 2016. The presentation introduced WordPress, discussing the differences between WordPress.com and WordPress.org, how to choose between themes and plugins, basic coding tips, recommendations for social media use, common questions, and extra resources for learning more. The presentation provided an overview of key WordPress concepts for beginners.
This document summarizes the services and expertise offered by Acquia, a Drupal consulting firm. It discusses Acquia's Drupal and open source expertise, software industry experience, and the Acquia Network which provides Drupal support and optimized hosting. It also introduces the author and describes services like Drupal jumpstarts, workshops, audits, on-site consulting, and balancing custom and contributed code. The document emphasizes best practices in areas like content and display architecture, security, performance, infrastructure, maintenance, and deployment to help clients maintain a high-quality Drupal site.
The document discusses the power and flexibility of WordPress. It explores unique frontend experiences, customized backend publishing experiences, and themes and plugins. It debunks common myths about WordPress and highlights examples of complex sites built with WordPress, including Twitchy.com, Blondie.net, LifeAndTimes.com, UniversalSports.com, Rhode Island Energy, and eMusic. It also discusses popular theme libraries and plugins like Gravity Forms, WooCommerce, bbPress, and BuddyPress.
Deploying distributed software services to the cloud without breaking a sweatSusan Potter
The document contains the output of multiple "finger" commands run on the user "susan". It shows Susan Potter is logged in from tty1 and has been on since 1997. It also lists her home directory, shell, and social media accounts. The remaining content discusses the scope of a talk and covers various DevOps and cloud computing topics at a high-level, including delivery models, characteristics, definitions, deployment pipelines, bottlenecks, and automation approaches.
The document discusses the Lift web framework. It describes Lift as being tremendously secure, highly interactive, and very friendly to designers. It also notes that Lift enables successful large scale web deployments, as sites like Foursquare and The Guardian use Lift to serve millions of pages daily.
This document provides an overview of using WordPress as a content management system (CMS) for building websites. It discusses CMS concepts and selecting a CMS. It focuses on WordPress, providing an overview of its features and benefits. The document outlines a 7 step process for building a WordPress site: 1) plan the site, 2) install WordPress, 3) set up WordPress, 4) select a theme, 5) install plugins, 6) do SEO, and 7) add content. It provides examples for planning and setting up a hypothetical site for an Oklahoma City disc dog club.
Oxford DrupalCamp 2012 - The things we found in your websitehernanibf
The document discusses various issues found on a website during an audit. It describes symptoms of problems with content architecture like duplicate content types and unused fields. It also outlines issues with site architecture such as custom modules that are not well designed or reusable, unnecessary complexity from unused features, and basic security vulnerabilities around outdated software, permissions, and injection attacks. The document provides guidance on how to further investigate and address these problems.
Learn the basics of building WordPress themes. This presentation is appropriate for people who are somewhat familiar with PHP and databases.
To Learn More, check out http://techliminal.com
This document outlines a workshop on building custom responsive WordPress themes. The workshop will be led by Joe, a self-taught web developer with 17+ years of experience including 5 years working with WordPress, and David, a web developer with 2+ years of WordPress experience. The topics that will be covered include why to build a custom theme, available responsive themes, the basic framework for a responsive theme, theme building tips, and a code demo.
Page loading performance, also known as front-end performance, refers to how quickly a web page and all its components (CSS, JS, images) load. It is important for Drupal sites because users expect fast sites and Drupal powers many large, international sites. The document discusses tools for measuring performance like YSlow and Jiffy and provides an overview of optimizations that can be made to Drupal like enabling CSS/JS aggregation, leveraging a CDN, and putting JavaScript files at the bottom of pages. It also outlines challenges and potential solutions discussed in the author's bachelor thesis around CDN integration and relocating JavaScript.
There is new slide for this at http://www.slideshare.net/catchinternet/contributing-to-wordpress-theme-review-at-wordpressorg
Guide to Start WordPress Theme Review. Useful for WordPress Theme Developers, wannabe WordPress Theme Developers and wannabe WordPress Theme Reviewer
BASIC Wordpress content management training August 2014Brenton Johnson
This document provides an overview and introduction to using Wordpress for content management. It discusses what Wordpress is, the different components, and costs involved. It also outlines what will and will not be covered in the training, including how to add and manage content but not administrator functions. The goals of the training are to understand the basic building blocks of Wordpress and be able to operate a blog using Wordpress. It then goes into detail about the different content types, categories vs tags, and hands-on demonstrations of publishing content and using various Wordpress plugins.
Service-Oriented Design and Implement with Rails3Wen-Tien Chang
The service implements a RESTful Users web service with Rails 3. It customizes Rails to remove unnecessary components and optimize for a lightweight REST service. The service follows best practices for API design including using JSON format, placing JSON conversion in the controller, and returning appropriate HTTP status codes. Requests are designed to be stateless and atomic. Errors are returned in a standardized JSON format.
This document provides an overview of a Drupal training covering various topics from September 12-20, 2014. The training will introduce participants to core Drupal concepts and components including nodes, content types, taxonomies, views, panels, modules, themes, and the database layer. It will cover setting up a development environment, installing Drupal, configuring the system, and extending Drupal through custom modules and themes. Participants will learn how Drupal handles user requests and its event-driven hook system. The document also provides contact information for the trainer.
One Drupal to rule them all - Drupalcamp Londonhernanibf
Dries famous sentence (http://buytaert.net/one-drupal-to-rule-them-all) is becoming a reality for many organisations from small shops to the enterprise space. More and more stakeholders are following the idea of standardising their online presence in Drupal and leverage the same code and infrastructure amongst their different sites. What they are seeking is a drastic reduction in the time needed to create, launch and configure a Drupal site at the same time that they reduce the maintenance effort of the whole sites' network.
To achieve it, a drastic change needs to happen on the standardisation of development processes, more strict control of the overall architecture while supporting new changes and requirements, and repeatable and trustable deployment process to avoid the opposite pitfall of "one site to break them all".
In this session we will look to what needs to be thought when creating such an architecture from the development process to the infrastructure to host the different environments needed. We will look at different solutions that allow maintain these sites factories and walk you through several architectures explaining their advantages and differences.
Finally, we will look in detail to Acquia's Cloud Site Factory, a fully-hosted SaaS solution that allows organisations to quickly deploy and manage websites by the hundreds. Pre-define site templates, create new sites in a single click, manage roles and permissions across sites and connect to existing analytics and data systems.
Front End page speed performance improvements for DrupalAndy Kucharski
If you are a developer or business manager with responsibilities over your website, then check out this deck..
What will you learn?
The webinar, created by our Founder and CEO, Andy Kucharski, is a highly accessible, information-rich review on the ways Drupal site performance can be radically improved. Some of the main topics we will cover include:
What is slow site speed?
What tools to use to diagnose it.
Plus six key improvements to make Drupal “run fast!”
And if that’s not already enough, we will also share some best practices monitoring tips for making sure you know how the Drupal server is performing 24/7.
A walkthrough of various application performance tuning tools and a good workflow for where to start, from a presentation at WindyCityRails 2011 in Chicago, IL.
See the video, and more Web and Ruby/Rails Performance info at www.RailsPerformance.com
-John McCaffrey
This document reviews the presentation sharing website SlideShare. It discusses SlideShare's sign up process, how to upload and edit presentations, features like adding audio tracks or hosting online meetings, supported file formats, and conclusions on the pros and cons for both free and paid versions. Key limitations of the free version noted are presentations always being public and a small file size limit of 20MB.
The document discusses best practices for developing websites using WordPress. It covers using WordPress as a content management system and blogging platform. It also summarizes using WordPress features like custom post types, custom fields, options API, transients API, and interacting with APIs. The document advocates following WordPress standards and using its built-in functions over directly modifying code or adding custom tables. It provides resources for learning more about WordPress development.
This talk was initially delivered at the Melbourne WordPress User Meetup. With tens of thousands of choices for WordPress users and developers, choosing the right theme is an important decision to make when working on any WordPress project. Theme choice impacts on not only design and UX, but also usability, accessibility, performance and more.
This document outlines 15 ways to improve WordPress security, including:
1. Choosing a hosting provider with strong security features rather than just price
2. Enabling automatic background updates for security releases in WordPress versions 3.7 and higher
3. Regularly updating plugins, deleting unused plugins, avoiding duplicate plugins, and checking compatibility before core updates
This document summarizes Shanta R. Nathwani's WordPress 101 presentation at WordCamp Minneapolis 2016. The presentation introduced WordPress, discussing the differences between WordPress.com and WordPress.org, how to choose between themes and plugins, basic coding tips, recommendations for social media use, common questions, and extra resources for learning more. The presentation provided an overview of key WordPress concepts for beginners.
WordPress as a CMS. Presentation by Matthew Vaccaro and Justin Sisley using the UCF College of Medicine as an example for how to use WordPress as a CMS.
WordPress 101 E-Commerce workshops July 2016WI Broadband
UW-Extension Broadband & E-Commerce Education Center e-commerce workshops, Viroqua and Prairie du Chien July 2016. Sponsored by the PSCW, hosted by UW-Extension and Vernon Communications Cooperative, Wisconsin.
A beginners guide to understanding setting up a WordPress site and the administration dashboard. Provides an overview of all the menus and their roles. Also provides some recommended settings for WordPress sites
Presentation at WordCamp RDU 2009. WordPress 101: A beginner's guide to WordPress. Animated version at http://nicomachus.net/2009/06/wordpress-101-a-beginners-guide-to-wordpress/
Vancouver WordPress Meetup - WordPress 101designfaire
Matt Mullenweg released WordPress in 2003 as an open source software. WordPress now powers over 200 million websites worldwide and is maintained through an open source community. WordPress.com offers a hosted version of WordPress that is easy to use but limited, while WordPress.org allows for more customization through plugins and themes but requires installing and maintaining the software. The document then provides instructions on installing WordPress and an overview of common features like pages, posts, categories, themes, widgets, and plugins.
WordPress 101 for Publishers was presented at the PubWest conference in Tuscon on November 12, 2009. This presentation provides an overview of how book publishers can use WordPress to support their online and digital publishing efforts.
The document discusses the results of a study on the effects of exercise on memory and thinking abilities in older adults. The study found that regular exercise can help reduce the decline in thinking abilities that often occurs with age. Older adults who exercised regularly performed better on cognitive tests and brain scans showed they had greater activity in important areas for memory and learning compared to less active peers.
This document discusses how WordPress can be used as a content management system (CMS). It explains that WordPress has a structure of pages, posts, categories, and templates that provide an architecture for organizing content. Pages are mapped to templates, categories are mapped to templates through posts, and templates are mapped to pages to display the content.
The document provides an overview of Google's Marketing Bootcamp on using WordPress. It covers topics like why to use WordPress, basic concepts like posts and pages, hosting options, the WordPress admin panel, adding and managing content, using plugins and themes to extend WordPress functionality, and how to create your own WordPress theme. The bootcamp aims to teach marketers the fundamentals of using the popular WordPress content management platform.
Website hacking – what does it mean? & What WordPress security issues you should be aware of
In this section, I think it will be enough to list several major technical ways how your website (or server-side infrastructure) can be hacked, so that you could grasp the overall picture:
(the ways how to protect from these and other hacks are given in one of the next sections below)
To know more click here http://metakave.com/website-hacking-what-does-it-mean-what-wordpress-security-issues-you-should-be-aware-of/
This document discusses WordPress plugins that can enhance a website. It introduces WP-Touch which makes websites mobile-ready. WordBooker and Twitter Blog help connect sites to social media like Facebook and Twitter. Checkout allows for e-commerce functionality. Gravity Forms creates forms easily. MailPress manages email lists. Blubrry Power Press adds podcasts. XML Sitemaps and Robots.txt help with search engine optimization. Headspace 2 also aids SEO. Examples show the plugins helping the author rank for searches.
This document discusses content management systems (CMS) like WordPress, Joomla, and Drupal. It explains that CMS tools allow individuals to create websites without coding knowledge. Common CMS requirements include a database and server. The document then provides more details on the features, advantages, and differences of WordPress, Joomla, and Drupal. It also discusses using social media to promote websites built with CMS platforms.
A presentation created for introducing WordPress and outlining what will be covered in my WordPress Super Survival Skills Course - http://www.the-colab.com/wordpress-survival-skills-course/
This document provides an overview of WordPress, including that it is a content management system used to create blogs and websites. WordPress is built using PHP, MySQL, and JavaScript, and it is free and open-source software. The document discusses hosting and installing WordPress, the features of WordPress including pages, posts, themes, widgets, and plugins. It also provides information on finding web hosting and domain providers.
This document provides an overview of how to create a website within one hour using WordPress. It introduces WordPress and its history as a content management system. Key information covered includes a comparison of WordPress, Joomla, and Drupal, what types of websites can be created in WordPress, and basic installation instructions. Resources for learning more about WordPress are also provided.
The Step-By-Step WordPress Guide for your Websites!.pdfWordpress India
Having incredible sites matters. It's how you associate with your guests and leads, make a positive initial feeling with new clients and lift transformations. The uplifting news is making your site doesn't need to be an overwhelming cycle… basically not with WordPress.
The simple-to-utilize CMS offers adaptable plans reasonable for all requirements. With no earlier information fundamental, you can Hire WordPress Developer for developing your website for your business, blog, portfolio, or online store right away.
This document provides an introduction to WordPress, including:
- An overview of what WordPress is and how it can be used to build various site types
- An explanation of the differences between WordPress.com and WordPress.org
- A tour of the WordPress admin interface and the basics of posts, pages, media, themes, and plugins
- Guidance on site care including backups, updates, and security
- Resources for additional learning and support
WP-CLI is a command line interface tool that allows users to manage WordPress from the command line. It is useful for developers, theme designers, and server administrators. To use WP-CLI, one needs SSH access and a "UNIX-like" environment like Linux, OSX, or Cygwin. Installing WP-CLI involves downloading the phar file, setting permissions, and moving it to a useful location like /usr/local/bin/wp. Common commands include installing and managing plugins, interacting with the database, searching and replacing content, generating test content, and more.
This tutorial will help you to know about the WordPress plugins, widgets and CMS, themes, etc. To know more details about WP Maintenance Mode visit - http://bit.ly/1WlDAs1
WordPress is a free and open-source content management system that can be used to create blogs and websites. It has a plugin architecture and a template system that allows for great flexibility and customization. WordPress is highly extensible through plugins and has a large community that contributes plugins, themes, and translations to support users in many different languages.
Journey to Docker Production: Evolving Your Infrastructure and Processes - Br...Docker, Inc.
DevOps in the Real World is far from perfect, and we're all somewhere on the path to one day writing that "Amazing-Hacker-News-Post about your chat-bot fully-automated micro-service infrastructure." But until then, how can you *really* start using containers today, in meaningful ways that impact yours and your customers productivity? This session is designed for practitioners who are looking for ways to get started now with Docker and Swarm in production. No Docker 101 here, this is for helping you be successful on your way to Dockerizing your production systems. Attendees will get tactics, example configs, real working infrastructure designs, and see the (sometimes messy) internals of Docker in production today.
WTF: Where To Focus when you take over a Drupal projectSymetris
Jumping into pre-built Drupal projects sometimes requires a leap of faith as much for clients as for developers. The client is usually coming out of a bad previous business relationship and the code is not always structured according to your standards.
During this talk, Symetris will share its experience and provide tips on how to navigate these often uncharted waters. Our goal is to help you convert an uncertain client into a long term partner and have a checklist of what to look out for as developers.
What Multisite can do for You - Anthony Cole - WordCamp Sydney 2012WordCamp Sydney
- WordPress Multisite allows managing multiple sites from one WordPress install, providing centralized administration and upgrades. It can be an efficient and cost-effective solution for agencies managing multiple client sites.
- The presenter initially set up Multisite for his agency to more easily upgrade and manage ten client sites. He discusses hosting considerations and recommends a VPS for Australian sites.
- Key aspects of his Multisite implementation include using Git for version control, Pingdom for monitoring, and custom scripts for backups to S3. He advocates keeping implementations simple to ensure stability.
This document summarizes a WordPress workshop presented by Terri Orlowski. The workshop covered an introduction to WordPress, how to install WordPress manually or via one-click installation, important security practices, useful plugins for backups, security and other functions, themes, and various ways WordPress can be used like for podcasts, newsletters, and more. The workshop provided information to help attendees understand and get started using WordPress.
The document provides an overview of a WordPress workshop, explaining why WordPress is useful, how to install and set up WordPress, and how to build pages, menus, posts, themes, and plugins. It discusses how Groupon started as a WordPress blog and recommends hosting and themes. The workshop aims to help attendees build their own website using WordPress.
To be a self-sustainable model through:
Providing marketable skills which are internationally accredited and that will help to improve the image of the trades in society.
Providing customer-oriented and industry specific skills.
Content Management Systems (CMS) allow individuals to create and manage website content without advanced coding knowledge. The document discusses several popular CMS options including WordPress, Joomla, and Drupal. It compares their features such as ease of use, extensibility through plugins/themes, and suitability for different types of websites. While each CMS has strengths, WordPress is highlighted as the easiest to use with an extensive library of plugins and themes, making it ideal for most basic websites.
This document provides an overview of WordPress, including what it is, its benefits, and how to install it. WordPress is an open source content management system that allows users to build customizable websites and blogs. It has thousands of plugins available that provide high levels of flexibility. Key benefits include it being free to use, easy to control and manage content, and having strong SEO and a large community for support. The document then outlines a 6 step process for installing WordPress which involves setting up a local server, downloading and extracting the WordPress files, creating a database, and configuring the website.
Similar to Wordpress 101 presentation - Canadian Association of Labour Media (CALM) (20)
Essentials of Automations: The Art of Triggers and Actions in FMESafe Software
In this second installment of our Essentials of Automations webinar series, we’ll explore the landscape of triggers and actions, guiding you through the nuances of authoring and adapting workspaces for seamless automations. Gain an understanding of the full spectrum of triggers and actions available in FME, empowering you to enhance your workspaces for efficient automation.
We’ll kick things off by showcasing the most commonly used event-based triggers, introducing you to various automation workflows like manual triggers, schedules, directory watchers, and more. Plus, see how these elements play out in real scenarios.
Whether you’re tweaking your current setup or building from the ground up, this session will arm you with the tools and insights needed to transform your FME usage into a powerhouse of productivity. Join us to discover effective strategies that simplify complex processes, enhancing your productivity and transforming your data management practices with FME. Let’s turn complexity into clarity and make your workspaces work wonders!
HCL Notes and Domino License Cost Reduction in the World of DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-and-domino-license-cost-reduction-in-the-world-of-dlau/
The introduction of DLAU and the CCB & CCX licensing model caused quite a stir in the HCL community. As a Notes and Domino customer, you may have faced challenges with unexpected user counts and license costs. You probably have questions on how this new licensing approach works and how to benefit from it. Most importantly, you likely have budget constraints and want to save money where possible. Don’t worry, we can help with all of this!
We’ll show you how to fix common misconfigurations that cause higher-than-expected user counts, and how to identify accounts which you can deactivate to save money. There are also frequent patterns that can cause unnecessary cost, like using a person document instead of a mail-in for shared mailboxes. We’ll provide examples and solutions for those as well. And naturally we’ll explain the new licensing model.
Join HCL Ambassador Marc Thomas in this webinar with a special guest appearance from Franz Walder. It will give you the tools and know-how to stay on top of what is going on with Domino licensing. You will be able lower your cost through an optimized configuration and keep it low going forward.
These topics will be covered
- Reducing license cost by finding and fixing misconfigurations and superfluous accounts
- How do CCB and CCX licenses really work?
- Understanding the DLAU tool and how to best utilize it
- Tips for common problem areas, like team mailboxes, functional/test users, etc
- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/building-and-scaling-ai-applications-with-the-nx-ai-manager-a-presentation-from-network-optix/
Robin van Emden, Senior Director of Data Science at Network Optix, presents the “Building and Scaling AI Applications with the Nx AI Manager,” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
In this presentation, van Emden covers the basics of scaling edge AI solutions using the Nx tool kit. He emphasizes the process of developing AI models and deploying them globally. He also showcases the conversion of AI models and the creation of effective edge AI pipelines, with a focus on pre-processing, model conversion, selecting the appropriate inference engine for the target hardware and post-processing.
van Emden shows how Nx can simplify the developer’s life and facilitate a rapid transition from concept to production-ready applications.He provides valuable insights into developing scalable and efficient edge AI solutions, with a strong focus on practical implementation.
Removing Uninteresting Bytes in Software FuzzingAftab Hussain
Imagine a world where software fuzzing, the process of mutating bytes in test seeds to uncover hidden and erroneous program behaviors, becomes faster and more effective. A lot depends on the initial seeds, which can significantly dictate the trajectory of a fuzzing campaign, particularly in terms of how long it takes to uncover interesting behaviour in your code. We introduce DIAR, a technique designed to speedup fuzzing campaigns by pinpointing and eliminating those uninteresting bytes in the seeds. Picture this: instead of wasting valuable resources on meaningless mutations in large, bloated seeds, DIAR removes the unnecessary bytes, streamlining the entire process.
In this work, we equipped AFL, a popular fuzzer, with DIAR and examined two critical Linux libraries -- Libxml's xmllint, a tool for parsing xml documents, and Binutil's readelf, an essential debugging and security analysis command-line tool used to display detailed information about ELF (Executable and Linkable Format). Our preliminary results show that AFL+DIAR does not only discover new paths more quickly but also achieves higher coverage overall. This work thus showcases how starting with lean and optimized seeds can lead to faster, more comprehensive fuzzing campaigns -- and DIAR helps you find such seeds.
- These are slides of the talk given at IEEE International Conference on Software Testing Verification and Validation Workshop, ICSTW 2022.
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Full-RAG: A modern architecture for hyper-personalizationZilliz
Mike Del Balso, CEO & Co-Founder at Tecton, presents "Full RAG," a novel approach to AI recommendation systems, aiming to push beyond the limitations of traditional models through a deep integration of contextual insights and real-time data, leveraging the Retrieval-Augmented Generation architecture. This talk will outline Full RAG's potential to significantly enhance personalization, address engineering challenges such as data management and model training, and introduce data enrichment with reranking as a key solution. Attendees will gain crucial insights into the importance of hyperpersonalization in AI, the capabilities of Full RAG for advanced personalization, and strategies for managing complex data integrations for deploying cutting-edge AI solutions.
Have you ever been confused by the myriad of choices offered by AWS for hosting a website or an API?
Lambda, Elastic Beanstalk, Lightsail, Amplify, S3 (and more!) can each host websites + APIs. But which one should we choose?
Which one is cheapest? Which one is fastest? Which one will scale to meet our needs?
Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
Ivanti’s Patch Tuesday breakdown goes beyond patching your applications and brings you the intelligence and guidance needed to prioritize where to focus your attention first. Catch early analysis on our Ivanti blog, then join industry expert Chris Goettl for the Patch Tuesday Webinar Event. There we’ll do a deep dive into each of the bulletins and give guidance on the risks associated with the newly-identified vulnerabilities.
OpenID AuthZEN Interop Read Out - AuthorizationDavid Brossard
During Identiverse 2024 and EIC 2024, members of the OpenID AuthZEN WG got together and demoed their authorization endpoints conforming to the AuthZEN API
Unlocking Productivity: Leveraging the Potential of Copilot in Microsoft 365, a presentation by Christoforos Vlachos, Senior Solutions Manager – Modern Workplace, Uni Systems
GraphRAG for Life Science to increase LLM accuracyTomaz Bratanic
GraphRAG for life science domain, where you retriever information from biomedical knowledge graphs using LLMs to increase the accuracy and performance of generated answers
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.
4. Morning Afternoon
session session
• Introductions and go around
5. Morning Afternoon
session session
• Introductions and go around
• Overview: what Wordpress is, why
so many are using it
6. Morning Afternoon
session session
• Introductions and go around
• Overview: what Wordpress is, why
so many are using it
• A look at some functions
Wordpress offers you to facilitate
building a website
7. Morning Afternoon
session session
• Introductions and go around
• Overview: what Wordpress is, why
so many are using it
• A look at some functions
Wordpress offers you to facilitate
building a website
• Some hands on building of a site
using the skills we have learned
8. Morning Afternoon
session session
• More functions & best practices.
• Introductions and go around
• Overview: what Wordpress is, why
so many are using it
• A look at some functions
Wordpress offers you to facilitate
building a website
• Some hands on building of a site
using the skills we have learned
9. Morning Afternoon
session session
• More functions & best practices.
• Introductions and go around
• Further hands on site building using
• Overview: what Wordpress is, why skills we have learned
so many are using it
• A look at some functions
Wordpress offers you to facilitate
building a website
• Some hands on building of a site
using the skills we have learned
10. Morning Afternoon
session session
• More functions & best practices.
• Introductions and go around
• Further hands on site building using
• Overview: what Wordpress is, why skills we have learned
so many are using it
• A brief look ‘under the hood’ at
• A look at some functions some of the features beyond the
Wordpress offers you to facilitate dashboard
building a website
• Some hands on building of a site
using the skills we have learned
11. Morning Afternoon
session session
• More functions & best practices.
• Introductions and go around
• Further hands on site building using
• Overview: what Wordpress is, why skills we have learned
so many are using it
• A brief look ‘under the hood’ at
• A look at some functions some of the features beyond the
Wordpress offers you to facilitate dashboard
building a website
• sum up, questions, additional
• Some hands on building of a site resources
using the skills we have learned
13. What is Wordpress?
• A publishing platform that
makes it easy for you to create
a website & publish on the
internet.
14. What is Wordpress?
• A publishing platform that
makes it easy for you to create
a website & publish on the
internet.
• It is open source, created by
Matt Mullenweg & developed by
his company, Automattic
19. Content Management
System (CMS)
• a computer system that allows publishing,
editing, and modifying content as well as
site maintenance from a central (web) page.
[modified definition from Wikipedia]
20. Content Management
System (CMS)
• a computer system that allows publishing,
editing, and modifying content as well as
site maintenance from a central (web) page.
• includes procedures to manage workflow in
a collaborative environment (multiple users).
[modified definition from Wikipedia]
22. Popular &
Growing
• 14.7% of all websites use Wordpress
23. Popular &
Growing
• 14.7% of all websites use Wordpress
• 22 of every 100 new domains are using
Wordpress
24. Popular &
Growing
• 14.7% of all websites use Wordpress
• 22 of every 100 new domains are using
Wordpress
• Some of the worlds largest, most complex
sites use Wordpress
38. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in
the 'cloud'
39. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in
the 'cloud'
• pre-configured themes
(designs) to choose from
40. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in
the 'cloud'
• pre-configured themes
(designs) to choose from
• it's functionality is
predefined (no add-ons).
41. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in
the 'cloud'
• pre-configured themes
(designs) to choose from
• it's functionality is
predefined (no add-ons).
• very quick to set-up
42. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in • owned by you (own server or
host)
the 'cloud'
• pre-configured themes
(designs) to choose from
• it's functionality is
predefined (no add-ons).
• very quick to set-up
43. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in • owned by you (own server or
host)
the 'cloud'
• pre-configured themes • set up site exactly as you
want
(designs) to choose from
• it's functionality is
predefined (no add-ons).
• very quick to set-up
44. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in • owned by you (own server or
host)
the 'cloud'
• pre-configured themes • set up site exactly as you
want
(designs) to choose from
• it's functionality is • installed & maintained by you
predefined (no add-ons).
• very quick to set-up
45. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in • owned by you (own server or
host)
the 'cloud'
• pre-configured themes • set up site exactly as you
want
(designs) to choose from
• it's functionality is • installed & maintained by you
predefined (no add-ons). • no restrictions. add ‘plugins’,
themes. complete control.
• very quick to set-up
46. .com .org
• owned by Automattic, in • owned by you (own server or
host)
the 'cloud'
• pre-configured themes • set up site exactly as you
want
(designs) to choose from
• it's functionality is • installed & maintained by you
predefined (no add-ons). • no restrictions. add ‘plugins’,
themes. complete control.
• very quick to set-up
• but if something goes wrong
you have to figure it out.
47. Ok, time to
dive into some
Wordpress functions!
50. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
51. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
1. Create (dated and categorized) updates
- things we normally associate with a blog
entry. These are called:
52. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
1. Create (dated and categorized) updates
- things we normally associate with a blog
entry. These are called:
POSTS
53. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
1. Create (dated and categorized) updates
- things we normally associate with a blog
entry. These are called:
POSTS
2. Create webpages such as an about page -
what we traditionally associate with
websites. These are called:
54. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
1. Create (dated and categorized) updates
- things we normally associate with a blog
entry. These are called:
POSTS
2. Create webpages such as an about page -
what we traditionally associate with
websites. These are called:
PAGES
55. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
56. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
3. Change the appearance of the site
(changing the colours, the fonts, and much
more) while preserving the content. These
are called:
57. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
3. Change the appearance of the site
(changing the colours, the fonts, and much
more) while preserving the content. These
are called:
THEMES
58. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
3. Change the appearance of the site
(changing the colours, the fonts, and much
more) while preserving the content. These
are called:
THEMES
4. Allows anyone with a username and
password to login and contribute and make
changes to the site. These are called:
59. 4 (of the many) things
Wordpress allows you to
3. Change the appearance of the site
(changing the colours, the fonts, and much
more) while preserving the content. These
are called:
THEMES
4. Allows anyone with a username and
password to login and contribute and make
changes to the site. These are called:
USERS
60. Posts VS.
Posts & Pages are the two main
places where you put content to be
viewed on your site.
But when do you use
one VS the other?
63. Posts Page
• time based materials
• what they have: date
published, author,
category, optional tags
64. Posts Page
• time based materials
• what they have: date
published, author,
category, optional tags
• usually in reverse
chronological order
65. Posts Page
• time based materials
• what they have: date
published, author,
category, optional tags
• usually in reverse
chronological order
• usually have images and
not a full page
66. Posts Page
• time based materials
• stuff that doesn’t really
change. permanent fixtures.
• what they have: date
published, author,
category, optional tags
• usually in reverse
chronological order
• usually have images and
not a full page
67. Posts Page
• time based materials
• stuff that doesn’t really
change. permanent fixtures.
• what they have: date
published, author,
• what they have: navigation,
category, optional tags custom page ‘looks’
• usually in reverse
chronological order
• usually have images and
not a full page
72. Users
• Accessing your profile: USERS > YOUR
PROFILE
• Different types of users:
1. Administrator - Somebody who has
access to all the administration features
73. Users
• Accessing your profile: USERS > YOUR
PROFILE
• Different types of users:
1. Administrator - Somebody who has
access to all the administration features
2. Editor - Somebody who can publish
and manage posts/pages as well as
manage other users' posts, etc.
74. Users
• Accessing your profile: USERS > YOUR
PROFILE
• Different types of users:
1. Administrator - Somebody who has
access to all the administration features
2. Editor - Somebody who can publish
and manage posts/pages as well as
manage other users' posts, etc.
75. Users
• Accessing your profile: USERS > YOUR
PROFILE
• Different types of users:
1. Administrator - Somebody who has
access to all the administration features
2. Editor - Somebody who can publish
and manage posts/pages as well as
manage other users' posts, etc.
77. Users
3. Author - Somebody who can publish
and manage their own posts
78. Users
3. Author - Somebody who can publish
and manage their own posts
4. Contributor - Somebody who can
write and manage their posts but not
publish them
79. Users
3. Author - Somebody who can publish
and manage their own posts
4. Contributor - Somebody who can
write and manage their posts but not
publish them
5. Subscriber - Somebody who can only
manage their profile
81. Themes
• Themes are look of your site plus some
added functionality - it's the Wordpress' way
of separating style and content
82. Themes
• Themes are look of your site plus some
added functionality - it's the Wordpress' way
of separating style and content
• Where are they? Wordpress theme directory
or use a theme from the web (careful!).
83. Themes
• Themes are look of your site plus some
added functionality - it's the Wordpress' way
of separating style and content
• Where are they? Wordpress theme directory
or use a theme from the web (careful!).
• add themes in Appearance > Themes
Activate or switch them here as well.
85. Themes:
Changing Styles
• You make theme changes in the
appearance tab. Or customize styles
through cascading style sheets.
• Can also do custom themes
86. Widgets:
• Small applications that show
info in the sidebar and footer.
eg - Twitter feed, links to recent
posts.
• Found in Appearance > Widgets
About me: short story, why I am here\nAbout you all (go around): who you are, why you are here, what you want out of this\n- Slides will be sent later, so don’t need to take super-detailed notes\n( If you have used WP before, you can skip this! )\n
What to expect: we are going to do this, this and this, and you will learn this.\n\n\n
What to expect: we are going to do this, this and this, and you will learn this.\n\n\n
What to expect: we are going to do this, this and this, and you will learn this.\n\n\n
What to expect: we are going to do this, this and this, and you will learn this.\n\n\n
What to expect: we are going to do this, this and this, and you will learn this.\n\n\n
What to expect: we are going to do this, this and this, and you will learn this.\n\n\n
What to expect: we are going to do this, this and this, and you will learn this.\n\n\n
What to expect: we are going to do this, this and this, and you will learn this.\n\n\n
- First ask the crowd what they know about Wordpress or what they think of when they think of Wordpress.\n- [Then the fade-in]\n- go to Wordpress.org \n- go to Automattic.com\n\n
- First ask the crowd what they know about Wordpress or what they think of when they think of Wordpress.\n- [Then the fade-in]\n- go to Wordpress.org \n- go to Automattic.com\n\n
Wordpress got it's start as blogging software and it continues to be used by millions of blogs.\n-[Go to example blogs] \nhttp://www.radioopensource.org\nwww.zeldman.com\n\n- [Fade-in]\n- [2nd fade in] then say: “you can make small well-designed and simple sites all the way to large-scale and very powerful websites.”\nwww.cnn.com\n\n
Wordpress got it's start as blogging software and it continues to be used by millions of blogs.\n-[Go to example blogs] \nhttp://www.radioopensource.org\nwww.zeldman.com\n\n- [Fade-in]\n- [2nd fade in] then say: “you can make small well-designed and simple sites all the way to large-scale and very powerful websites.”\nwww.cnn.com\n\n
[Before Fade In] Ask if people have ideas of what a CMS is.\n\n[FADE IN] - Point 1 - place to do all your work pertaining to the site (...expand...)\n - Point 2 - place to collaborate with others in that work on the same site. (...expand...)\n \n\n
[Before Fade In] Ask if people have ideas of what a CMS is.\n\n[FADE IN] - Point 1 - place to do all your work pertaining to the site (...expand...)\n - Point 2 - place to collaborate with others in that work on the same site. (...expand...)\n \n\n
\n\n[After fading in the last one - go to example sites WEB]\n\n\nhttp://cyberunions.org/\nhttp://collectivebargainingfacts.com/\nhttp://www.lollapalooza.com\nhttp://www.tribunemediagroup.com\n\n\n
\n\n[After fading in the last one - go to example sites WEB]\n\n\nhttp://cyberunions.org/\nhttp://collectivebargainingfacts.com/\nhttp://www.lollapalooza.com\nhttp://www.tribunemediagroup.com\n\n\n
\n\n[After fading in the last one - go to example sites WEB]\n\n\nhttp://cyberunions.org/\nhttp://collectivebargainingfacts.com/\nhttp://www.lollapalooza.com\nhttp://www.tribunemediagroup.com\n\n\n
[1.Fade In and discuss]\n\n1. easy, nothing to be scared about -managing the website is straightforward once you get the hang of it. Sure, some of the set up can be a bit technical, and customizing/styling as well, but overall day-to-day use of Wordpress is quite easy.\n\n2. Wordpress out of the box is just the base. It’s the adding of ‘stuff’ that make is so powerful, and allows you to make it your own.\n \n
[1.Fade In and discuss]\n\n1. easy, nothing to be scared about -managing the website is straightforward once you get the hang of it. Sure, some of the set up can be a bit technical, and customizing/styling as well, but overall day-to-day use of Wordpress is quite easy.\n\n2. Wordpress out of the box is just the base. It’s the adding of ‘stuff’ that make is so powerful, and allows you to make it your own.\n \n
3. You can do your full web communications workflow within Wordpress - drafts, reviews, different levels of publishers,... assign roles\n4.\n5.\n
3. You can do your full web communications workflow within Wordpress - drafts, reviews, different levels of publishers,... assign roles\n4.\n5.\n
3. You can do your full web communications workflow within Wordpress - drafts, reviews, different levels of publishers,... assign roles\n4.\n5.\n
12 years ago you needed to have a great deal of technical knowledge to publish to the web and it wouldn't be strange for this type of functionality to cost $100,000. Now the price is way down and it is manageable\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - just name them (...expand...)\n - Point 2 - state self-hosted VS cloud hosted. (...expand...)\n \n\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - just name them (...expand...)\n - Point 2 - state self-hosted VS cloud hosted. (...expand...)\n \n\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - just name them (...expand...)\n - Point 2 - state self-hosted VS cloud hosted. (...expand...)\n \n\n
\nDARREN: GO OVER THE DASHBOARD (but first --> discuss INSTALLATION of Wordpress.org. Decided not to go through this process with you as there are a few things we would have to have set up that might be a bit technical for beginners and would eat up a bit of our Wordpress time. \n\nA few steps: \n -set up database where everything will go\n-set up hosting with hosting company\n-download Wordpress from wordpress.org\n-configure a few things and upload the files\n\nShow book, then go to next slide \n
Show \n\nThen go back one slide to dashboard\n
this morning (or perhaps into the afternoon) we will be discussing and implementing 4 of the many features of Wordpress which will help you get started building a website. Quickly name each one, we will be coming back to each one in much detail.\n\n1. Allows you to create dated and categorized updates- things we normally associate with a blog entry. 1a.These are called POSTS\n2. Allows you to create pages such as an ‘about’ page\nwhat we traditionally associate with websites 2a. These are called PAGES\n\n\n
this morning (or perhaps into the afternoon) we will be discussing and implementing 4 of the many features of Wordpress which will help you get started building a website. Quickly name each one, we will be coming back to each one in much detail.\n\n1. Allows you to create dated and categorized updates- things we normally associate with a blog entry. 1a.These are called POSTS\n2. Allows you to create pages such as an ‘about’ page\nwhat we traditionally associate with websites 2a. These are called PAGES\n\n\n
this morning (or perhaps into the afternoon) we will be discussing and implementing 4 of the many features of Wordpress which will help you get started building a website. Quickly name each one, we will be coming back to each one in much detail.\n\n1. Allows you to create dated and categorized updates- things we normally associate with a blog entry. 1a.These are called POSTS\n2. Allows you to create pages such as an ‘about’ page\nwhat we traditionally associate with websites 2a. These are called PAGES\n\n\n
this morning (or perhaps into the afternoon) we will be discussing and implementing 4 of the many features of Wordpress which will help you get started building a website. Quickly name each one, we will be coming back to each one in much detail.\n\n1. Allows you to create dated and categorized updates- things we normally associate with a blog entry. 1a.These are called POSTS\n2. Allows you to create pages such as an ‘about’ page\nwhat we traditionally associate with websites 2a. These are called PAGES\n\n\n
3. It allows you to change the appearance of the site while preserving the content. You can change the colours the fonts, whatever 3a. These are called THEMES.\n4. Allows anyone with a username and password to login and contribute and make changes to the site. These are called users. We will discuss users and the different roles they can be assigned in a few minutes.\n
3. It allows you to change the appearance of the site while preserving the content. You can change the colours the fonts, whatever 3a. These are called THEMES.\n4. Allows anyone with a username and password to login and contribute and make changes to the site. These are called users. We will discuss users and the different roles they can be assigned in a few minutes.\n
3. It allows you to change the appearance of the site while preserving the content. You can change the colours the fonts, whatever 3a. These are called THEMES.\n4. Allows anyone with a username and password to login and contribute and make changes to the site. These are called users. We will discuss users and the different roles they can be assigned in a few minutes.\n
3. It allows you to change the appearance of the site while preserving the content. You can change the colours the fonts, whatever 3a. These are called THEMES.\n4. Allows anyone with a username and password to login and contribute and make changes to the site. These are called users. We will discuss users and the different roles they can be assigned in a few minutes.\n
\nPosts & Pages are the two main places where you put content to be viewed on your site. But when do you use one VS the other?\nPosts-time based e.g. blog entries\nPages-static web pages eg. “About”\n[After reading the above - point out where on the dashboard by showing red arrows] \n
Categories - overall descriptions of your content\nTags - relate content to other content - more horizontal relationship\n\n- explain each of these things one by one.\nSLOW DOWN _ DO THIS SLOWLY - when done, go to reWORKit DEV (www.calm reworkit.net/wp-admin) to show around the various PARTS of 1. a post and 2. a page. [ABOUT 15 minutes]\nfor eg. IMAGE: \nVIDEO USE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62IYkX2lPSI\n\n\nTO COVER:\nreWORKit POST A- Create new post - TOOLBAR > NEW > POST or POSTS > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - go over the formatting bar [tell them to do it all in Wordpress, don't use word or something like that]\n- text tool bar - bold/italicize, lists, insert more, spellcheck, full screen,\n- headings very important for search engines.\nC- Links - making them and formatting them\n- in text tool bar - click link and add URL, title, new window?\n- + can link to existing content\nD- Images - Add Media button\n(Title, Alternate text - must use) (Alternative - Caption, Description)\n- URL, alignment (text wrap)\n- Can edit image after posting\nE- Embedding video - add a YouTube video to your post\n\nreWORKit PAGE A- Create new PAGE - TOOLBAR > NEW > PAGES or PAGES > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - same as posts\nC- Links - same as posts\n\n\n\n
Categories - overall descriptions of your content\nTags - relate content to other content - more horizontal relationship\n\n- explain each of these things one by one.\nSLOW DOWN _ DO THIS SLOWLY - when done, go to reWORKit DEV (www.calm reworkit.net/wp-admin) to show around the various PARTS of 1. a post and 2. a page. [ABOUT 15 minutes]\nfor eg. IMAGE: \nVIDEO USE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62IYkX2lPSI\n\n\nTO COVER:\nreWORKit POST A- Create new post - TOOLBAR > NEW > POST or POSTS > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - go over the formatting bar [tell them to do it all in Wordpress, don't use word or something like that]\n- text tool bar - bold/italicize, lists, insert more, spellcheck, full screen,\n- headings very important for search engines.\nC- Links - making them and formatting them\n- in text tool bar - click link and add URL, title, new window?\n- + can link to existing content\nD- Images - Add Media button\n(Title, Alternate text - must use) (Alternative - Caption, Description)\n- URL, alignment (text wrap)\n- Can edit image after posting\nE- Embedding video - add a YouTube video to your post\n\nreWORKit PAGE A- Create new PAGE - TOOLBAR > NEW > PAGES or PAGES > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - same as posts\nC- Links - same as posts\n\n\n\n
Categories - overall descriptions of your content\nTags - relate content to other content - more horizontal relationship\n\n- explain each of these things one by one.\nSLOW DOWN _ DO THIS SLOWLY - when done, go to reWORKit DEV (www.calm reworkit.net/wp-admin) to show around the various PARTS of 1. a post and 2. a page. [ABOUT 15 minutes]\nfor eg. IMAGE: \nVIDEO USE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62IYkX2lPSI\n\n\nTO COVER:\nreWORKit POST A- Create new post - TOOLBAR > NEW > POST or POSTS > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - go over the formatting bar [tell them to do it all in Wordpress, don't use word or something like that]\n- text tool bar - bold/italicize, lists, insert more, spellcheck, full screen,\n- headings very important for search engines.\nC- Links - making them and formatting them\n- in text tool bar - click link and add URL, title, new window?\n- + can link to existing content\nD- Images - Add Media button\n(Title, Alternate text - must use) (Alternative - Caption, Description)\n- URL, alignment (text wrap)\n- Can edit image after posting\nE- Embedding video - add a YouTube video to your post\n\nreWORKit PAGE A- Create new PAGE - TOOLBAR > NEW > PAGES or PAGES > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - same as posts\nC- Links - same as posts\n\n\n\n
Categories - overall descriptions of your content\nTags - relate content to other content - more horizontal relationship\n\n- explain each of these things one by one.\nSLOW DOWN _ DO THIS SLOWLY - when done, go to reWORKit DEV (www.calm reworkit.net/wp-admin) to show around the various PARTS of 1. a post and 2. a page. [ABOUT 15 minutes]\nfor eg. IMAGE: \nVIDEO USE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62IYkX2lPSI\n\n\nTO COVER:\nreWORKit POST A- Create new post - TOOLBAR > NEW > POST or POSTS > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - go over the formatting bar [tell them to do it all in Wordpress, don't use word or something like that]\n- text tool bar - bold/italicize, lists, insert more, spellcheck, full screen,\n- headings very important for search engines.\nC- Links - making them and formatting them\n- in text tool bar - click link and add URL, title, new window?\n- + can link to existing content\nD- Images - Add Media button\n(Title, Alternate text - must use) (Alternative - Caption, Description)\n- URL, alignment (text wrap)\n- Can edit image after posting\nE- Embedding video - add a YouTube video to your post\n\nreWORKit PAGE A- Create new PAGE - TOOLBAR > NEW > PAGES or PAGES > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - same as posts\nC- Links - same as posts\n\n\n\n
Categories - overall descriptions of your content\nTags - relate content to other content - more horizontal relationship\n\n- explain each of these things one by one.\nSLOW DOWN _ DO THIS SLOWLY - when done, go to reWORKit DEV (www.calm reworkit.net/wp-admin) to show around the various PARTS of 1. a post and 2. a page. [ABOUT 15 minutes]\nfor eg. IMAGE: \nVIDEO USE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62IYkX2lPSI\n\n\nTO COVER:\nreWORKit POST A- Create new post - TOOLBAR > NEW > POST or POSTS > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - go over the formatting bar [tell them to do it all in Wordpress, don't use word or something like that]\n- text tool bar - bold/italicize, lists, insert more, spellcheck, full screen,\n- headings very important for search engines.\nC- Links - making them and formatting them\n- in text tool bar - click link and add URL, title, new window?\n- + can link to existing content\nD- Images - Add Media button\n(Title, Alternate text - must use) (Alternative - Caption, Description)\n- URL, alignment (text wrap)\n- Can edit image after posting\nE- Embedding video - add a YouTube video to your post\n\nreWORKit PAGE A- Create new PAGE - TOOLBAR > NEW > PAGES or PAGES > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - same as posts\nC- Links - same as posts\n\n\n\n
Categories - overall descriptions of your content\nTags - relate content to other content - more horizontal relationship\n\n- explain each of these things one by one.\nSLOW DOWN _ DO THIS SLOWLY - when done, go to reWORKit DEV (www.calm reworkit.net/wp-admin) to show around the various PARTS of 1. a post and 2. a page. [ABOUT 15 minutes]\nfor eg. IMAGE: \nVIDEO USE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=62IYkX2lPSI\n\n\nTO COVER:\nreWORKit POST A- Create new post - TOOLBAR > NEW > POST or POSTS > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - go over the formatting bar [tell them to do it all in Wordpress, don't use word or something like that]\n- text tool bar - bold/italicize, lists, insert more, spellcheck, full screen,\n- headings very important for search engines.\nC- Links - making them and formatting them\n- in text tool bar - click link and add URL, title, new window?\n- + can link to existing content\nD- Images - Add Media button\n(Title, Alternate text - must use) (Alternative - Caption, Description)\n- URL, alignment (text wrap)\n- Can edit image after posting\nE- Embedding video - add a YouTube video to your post\n\nreWORKit PAGE A- Create new PAGE - TOOLBAR > NEW > PAGES or PAGES > ADD NEW\n B- Text formatting - same as posts\nC- Links - same as posts\n\n\n\n
I’ve built a subsite on my site for you to work with, so we don’t have to install and do the initial setup. calm.reworkit\n\n each group will add one post and one page with various functionality. In the end we will have a website with 5 pages and 5 posts, and then we can come back and check out the site we built!\n\n- HAND OUT WORKSHEETS (groups of 2 - 10 groups and worksheets TOTAL)\nON worksheet: \n\n\n\n\n\n \n\n
[FADE IN to each] - just show around on web (reWORKit). But don’t do an exercise.\n\n
[FADE IN to each] - just show around on web (reWORKit). But don’t do an exercise.\n\n
[FADE IN to each] - just show around on web (reWORKit). But don’t do an exercise.\n\n
[FADE IN to each] - just show around on web (reWORKit). But don’t do an exercise.\n\n
[FADE IN to each] - just show around on web (reWORKit). But don’t do an exercise.\n\n
[FADE IN to each] - just show around on web (reWORKit). But don’t do an exercise.\n\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - just show around on web. But dont do an exercise.\n\nScroll down chart at: http://codex.wordpress.org/Roles_and_Capabilities\n\n \n \n\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - just show around on web. But dont do an exercise.\n\nScroll down chart at: http://codex.wordpress.org/Roles_and_Capabilities\n\n \n \n\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - just show around on web. But dont do an exercise.\n\nScroll down chart at: http://codex.wordpress.org/Roles_and_Capabilities\n\n \n \n\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - show around reworkit.net for 5 minutes. show an example of a site and then the backend. Maybe go to springforward.com\n\n[FADE In] Point 2 - show where you find themes (below) and warn about using random free themes that arent either in Wordpress directory or reputable.\n\nhttp://wordpress.org/extend/themes/ go to woothemes.com elegantthemes.com\n[FADE In] Point 3 Appearance > themes show how you can add (Use ‘Responsive’) and switch themes using reWORKit... 10 minute\nExercise 2 - adding a theme to site - back to the exercise files.\n\n\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - show around reworkit.net for 5 minutes. show an example of a site and then the backend. Maybe go to springforward.com\n\n[FADE In] Point 2 - show where you find themes (below) and warn about using random free themes that arent either in Wordpress directory or reputable.\n\nhttp://wordpress.org/extend/themes/ go to woothemes.com elegantthemes.com\n[FADE In] Point 3 Appearance > themes show how you can add (Use ‘Responsive’) and switch themes using reWORKit... 10 minute\nExercise 2 - adding a theme to site - back to the exercise files.\n\n\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - show around reworkit.net for 5 minutes. show an example of a site and then the backend. Maybe go to springforward.com\n\n[FADE In] Point 2 - show where you find themes (below) and warn about using random free themes that arent either in Wordpress directory or reputable.\n\nhttp://wordpress.org/extend/themes/ go to woothemes.com elegantthemes.com\n[FADE In] Point 3 Appearance > themes show how you can add (Use ‘Responsive’) and switch themes using reWORKit... 10 minute\nExercise 2 - adding a theme to site - back to the exercise files.\n\n\n
Exercise - adding a theme to site\n
[FADE IN] - Point 1 - just show theme in Appearance tab. Show that some things can be done right in the Appearance tab Name the other stuff (name that fit’s in the files but don’t show files). But dont do an exercise.\n\n\n\n \n \n\n
read out this page and then go to Widgets in reWORKit - Appearance > Widgets\n