Posted in February 15, 2010 ¬ 3:59 pmh.
John Nasta
Wordpress web site owners often come to realize that they want to change the URL of their web site, whether it is because they want the site to be accessible from the root folder (without using a redirect) or because they want to change the domain name of the web site.
If you’d like to do [...]
Read the rest of this entry »
Wordpress
access, blog, domains, google, hacks, installation, plugins, SEO, upgrades, upgrading, urls, webmasters, websites, Wordpress
Posted in June 9, 2009 ¬ 1:23 pmh.
John Nasta
I see a lot of people asking how to make their Wordpress site accessible from the root directory folder. In most standard installations, Wordpress is installed in a sub-folder and the only way to access the site is to add that sub-folder name to the site’s URL.
If you read the wordpress.org support forum you’ll find [...]
Read the rest of this entry »
Wordpress
accessing, folders, hacking, hacks, installation, modifying, root, upgrades, upgrading, urls, 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 »
Wordpress
free, hosting, installation, lunarpages, newbies, plugins, private, protected, protection, public, roles, themes, upgrades, upgrading, users, widgets, Wordpress
Posted in March 12, 2009 ¬ 1:23 pmh.
John Nasta
If you’re a devout user of the Wordpress Automatic Upgrade (WPAU) plugin that so many people have loved in the past, it’s time to delete it.
Wordpress versions 2.7 and higher have an automatic upgrade option built in. The plugin interferes with the native upgrade routine and vice versa, so neither of them will work.
If you’ve [...]
Read the rest of this entry »