Posted in April 1, 2010 ¬ 4:21 pmh.John Nasta
Arinesce is a simple fixed width two column, left sidebar, widget ready WordPress theme that supports threaded and nested comments. It now also supports random header images. Blog name & tagline can easily be moved to the top of the sidebar to allow room for Google AdSense® ads above the main content. The default colors [...]
Read the rest of this entry »
WordpressArinesce, beta versions, color schemes, comments, default colors, fixed width, google, google adsense, left-sidebar, logo placement, nested, simple, themes, threaded, two-column, versions, widget-ready, widgets, Wordpress
Posted in January 30, 2010 ¬ 5:43 pmh.John Nasta
Atahualpa from Bytes For All just might be the most impressive free WordPress theme available to date. Much like the Thesis theme from DIY Themes, you get a complete back-end interface for customizing the theme. However, Thesis starts at $87 for the Personal license, and Atahualpa is free. The most important thing to know about [...]
Read the rest of this entry »
Wordpressarchives, Atahualpa, customizations, customize, customizing, hacks, pages, posts, search, themes, Thesis, tutorials, Wordpress
Posted in April 25, 2009 ¬ 12:25 amh.John Nasta
Finally, a post about Wordpress for people who have never used it. Are you “wp-curious”?
Read the rest of this entry »
Wordpressfree, hosting, installation, lunarpages, newbies, plugins, private, protected, protection, public, roles, themes, upgrades, upgrading, users, widgets, Wordpress
Posted in April 23, 2009 ¬ 6:32 pmh.John Nasta
Basically, unless you are a very good coder, you should forget that you ever heard of this theme. Here are some of the reasons why: It is not widget-ready and the sidebar is not contained within <UL> or <OL> tags. The single post template (single.php) does not call in the sidebar, so when a user [...]
Read the rest of this entry »
Wordpressalternate0, blog, css, hacks, Links, parlin, sidebar, themes, theron, thoughtmechanics, upgrades, websites, widgets, Wordpress
Posted in February 16, 2009 ¬ 6:08 pmh.John Nasta
Those of you who like to copy & paste your posts from Microsoft Word have probably noticed that doing so carries font & formatting information into your blog along with the text. This can cause unexpected formatting problems, especially when inserting the “More” tag, changing themes, or when your content is reproduced in RSS readers [...]
Read the rest of this entry »