Category: WordPress Talk

  • What WordPress and a broken car have in common

    What WordPress and a broken car have in common

    A few years ago I was leaving my parents driveway in the morning, I get into my car, started it up and started turning the steering wheel when suddenly I heard a crack noise and lost the ability to turn the wheels.

    As my knowledge of car mechanics it’s almost inexistent and one of my father friends is a mechanic, I called him to take a look into it and gone through with my day, knowing I’ll retrieve the car at the mechanic’s garage later.

    At the end of the evening, I went to the mechanic’s, paid him a beer and the part he changed and got into my car to go to the movies with my new girlfriend.

    About 5 minutes driving I heard the crack again and guess what happened, I was without a car for the second time that day. But this time, I had a schedule, I was late for my date and in the middle of the street without my beloved transportation… F*ck.

    I literally ran to the mechanic’s garage again to catch him still there and told him what happened.

    Long story short, the fix didn’t work at first out and the car  has toed there again. I was left with only one solution, a 1 and a half hour of many stops and subway changes trip to the movies, and yes, do the same again to get back home.

    So, what this story got to do with WordPress?

    I’ve done something with my car that I’m totally against in my line of work, opted for the cheapest and quickest fix for my problem, instead of making sure it has “the best” solution and it has going to properly solve my problem.

    When you cut corners, either to save a few bucks or to have a faster turnaround you’re risking your website future.

    When you’re building a website, fixing something in it or expanding its current functionalities you always have a ton of options to choose from. Free or premium plugins and themes, custom development, your cousin friend that understands a little about computers, freelancers, and companies.

    Whatever is your choice you need to be sure, what it means for your website future and for its continued functionality and availability.

    And what should I choose?

    The answer to this question will always be “depends”.

    It depends on :

    1. your budget,
    2. the needed functionality
    3. the turnaround you need for it.

    My advice would be for you to seek someone that understands:

    1. your needs,
    2. your website and business needs,
    3. the platform where you want to build in, WordPress.

    A good professional will be able to tell you what you should do and what would be the best option for your situation.

    It’s not always installing the plugin X or Y and Z, it can be a custom built plugin or/and theme.

    WordPress is more than a simple CMS it’s a framework, totally customizable for your needs.

    You can start small and improve along the way or start with all the bells and whistles. You can even build it yourself, but remember your choices today will impact the way your website works and it’s future.

  • Matosinhos WordPress Meetup

    3 reasons for using WooCommerce

    On Thursday, last week, I’ve attended the first of a monthly series of WordPress meetups in Porto, organized by the “Comunidade Portuguesa de WordPress” this series intends to bring more people to the community as it’s location will change inside the Porto district.

    It couldn’t have started in a better way, Pedro Fonseca, Matosinhos resident and this session organizer, brought to us his presentation about e-commerce, in a consulting oriented presentation, Pedro shown us a variety of plugins available for this purpose and some of their key features.

    Presentation available here (Portuguese Only)

    This day had also the presence of an accountant and a lawyer to clarify any question about legal and tax issues which propelled us into a clarifying and very interesting discussion about these topics in internet business today.

     

    From the plugins shown my favorite and go-to plugin for e-commerce is WooCommerce from WooThemes.

     

    There are many reasons to my choice, and having worked and built websites in each one of them I can say that at least for me WooCommerce is by far the best one, why?

    My 3 major reasons are:

    • Biggest community and free support,
    • Built using the same structure that WordPress itself uses (functions, naming, template system, etc.),
    • Available documentation and Github code repository.
  • Experimenting with WordPress Multisite

    Managing multiple WordPress powered websites

    The Problem

    In my current position the web team is in charge of the day to day maintenance of more than 20 WordPress websites.

    In order to facilitate this maintenance I’ve searched for a tool wich allow us to quickly update, install and uninstall plugins and WordPress core, this day to day task has being done by hand and sometimes left behind do to it’s time consuming nature.

     

    WordPress Multisite

    When I first heard about Multisite, I was thrilled, a free tool that allows me to manage multiple websites, and It’s totally embed with the usual WordPress install even greater, used also to power WordPress.com and all it’s websites, must be awesome! And it’s but not to manage multiple websites with different scopes and different types of information and built by different people, let’s see why…

     

    The Pros of using WordPress Multisite

    • Ability to update plugins across all websites at once
    • Manage all themes, plugins and WordPress install from a single dashboard
    • Ability to map new domains with a few clicks
    • Ability to use child-themes to raise the repetition in theme building

    The Cons of using WordPress Multisite

    •  All websites are in the same database
    • Difficult retro-activity (import all sites to the multisite installation is very time consuming due to the amount of manual changes needed in each one)
    • Possible plugin incompatibility in some older websites
    • Unable to provide our clients with a FTP access, as all the website share the same installation and folders (only upload folders are defined “per-site”

    Conclusion

    WordPress Multisite it’s great and awesome and I’ll be using it to build a Websites network (of similar websites), exactly it’s purpose, but I won’t be using it to manage a website network.

    Why?

    A Multisite install it’s harder to manage and more heavy to the server maintenance and it won’t excel in managing multiple and different websites, each one with different plugins, different approaches and different functionalities.

     

    The Solution

    After some research I’ve found one excellent alternative http://infinitewp.com/.

    It’s tools allows me to perform almost every action I wished to achieve using WordPress Multisite from a single dashboard and it’s FREE (I love that, as will your employer/client).

    Some of infiniteWP functionalities are paid “add-ons” but the free version takes care of almost every part of the routine maintenance of the network and some of the “add-ons” sound really great also.

    One of the big “PROS” of this tool is that it’s self-hosted, awesome for someone who wishes to guarantee that everything he uses will be around when he needs it and wont be disappearing without any warning.

     

    Note:

    There are other tools that may be better looking or even with more functionalities like: ManageWP, WP Remote, Worpit, etc.

    Our choice for infinite WP is based essentially in it’s FREE version capabilities and in being a self-hosted solution.