July 5, 2013 — Learn how to add custom TinyMCE styles and remove unnecessary buttons (or add new ones), customize admin menus, add custom dashboard widgets, and more. A client-tailored admin area is the perfect way to minimize broken websites and maximize client happiness.
July 5, 2013 — This presentation explores a variety of strategies for mobile web development including responsive design, dedicated mobile sites, and server-side adaptive sites.
July 4, 2013 — Learn the basics of the command line in a hands-on walk-through! Learn to connect and manage files and directories, including downloading, unzipping, and installing plugins manually.
July 4, 2013 — A study of some of the challenges encountered, and solutions discovered, in moving the Brandon University websites from IIS/ASP to WordPress.
July 3, 2013 — WP Super Cache is a plugin designed to help speed up the performance of your website through caching your pages into static content.
July 3, 2013 — This presentation walks you through options of membership sites and gives you recommendations and practical steps to building your next membership site.
July 2, 2013 — This is a demonstration of the WordPress SEO search engine optimization plugin.
July 2, 2013 — WordPress’ roles seem simple enough on the surface, but behind the Administrator, Editor, and the other default roles is a powerful system that can be customized extensively. While some have said that other CMS’ have an advantage when it comes to security and customizing capabilities, this presentation demonstrates that that isn’t true.
July 1, 2013 — This presentation shows beginning developers and power users how easy it is to get started with WordPress plugin development. It begins with the basics of what a plugin is and how it’s structured. It explains the hooks (actions and filters API) and talks about some of the most commonly used WordPress APIs in plugins. Finally, some resources for developers and users.
July 1, 2013 — This presentation shows how to build your business on WordPress in the same way that WordPress is built – decoupled, distributed, and across the globe.