We recentely created this video to demonstrate how to set a featured image in WordPress 3.5 and above. WordPress 3.5 introduced a new media manager so many how to videos are out of date now.
[tnt_video id=1]
Please let us know have your comments.
We recentely created this video to demonstrate how to set a featured image in WordPress 3.5 and above. WordPress 3.5 introduced a new media manager so many how to videos are out of date now.
[tnt_video id=1]
Please let us know have your comments.
The next London Meetup is just around the corner and it would be great to see you there. It will be taking place on Wednesday 29 May from 5:30pm – 8:30pm (talks starting at 6pm) at Wikimedia UK, Development House, 56-64 Leonard Street, London, LON EC2A 4LT.
For those interested in using CiviCRM these sessions are a great way to learn more about how it works and get feedback from those already using Civi. If you’ve previously been to a meetup or use CiviCRM then you already know how great it is but you can still learn more about the different modules of Civi and perhaps get some inspiration of what more CiviCRM can do for you.
Registration and more information can be found here: http://civicrm.org/civicrm/event/info?reset=1&id=308
The sessions are still to be arranged but this is the agenda so far:
WPMU recently published a post on free WordPress themes from premium theme developers.
Theme designers who generally charge for their work, often list a couple of free themes as a showcase. Typically these are hard to find, but this post brings a list of 120 themes together.
Well worth a look.
My only reservation is to check the age of any themes you decide to use – check if it will work with the current WordPress version (and will it be supported in the future).
2020Media’s managed WordPress service keeps WordPress, themes and plugins up to date to your site is safe and secure.
We last looked at market share of web content management systems in 2011 so we thought it was time for an update.
Last time we looked, WordPress had a 14% market share of the entire web. Now its higher. WordPress is used by 17.7% of all the websites, that is a content management system market share of 54.9% (as many websites don’t use a recognisable content management system at all).
WordPress now claim to serve 65 million websites, up from 50 million 22 months ago. This includes hosted blogs.
Joomla has maintained it’s position as No.2 CMS with a 2.7% market share. Drupal is in 3rd place with 2.3%. Blogger (Google Blogs) has overtaken vBulletin with 1.3% of the web.
How to read the diagram from Web Technology Surveys:
67.8% of the websites use none of the content management systems that are monitored.
WordPress is used by 17.7% of all the websites, that is a content management system market share of 54.9%.
The trends look good for WordPress. It’s growth continues, and it is actively maintained and updated. New releases are generally welcomed by the community.
And not so good for Joomla. However Joomla has been much more active recently, so it will be worth watching to see if it can recover. Drupal appears to be in the midst of an internal restructuring so we will see how things change in the next 12 months. However it’s a firm favourite with a loyal band of developers so it’s not likely to disappear any time soon.
This graph shows the decline in websites that don’t use a content management system at all (that we could detect).
It’s goes from over 80% in 2010 to under 70% today. That’s a drop of 15% in 3 years.
The trend does seem to be flattening out, but here at 2020Media, we would say most – say 70% of new websites we host use a content management system.
Content Management Systems (CMS) give non technical people the tools to add/edit web pages. Using a CMS running a website becomes all about the content and not the ins and outs of how it works. With a CMS a user doesn’t need to understand html or any other type of coding, a CMS allows a website owner to concentrate on the important stuff, the content.
Benefits:
2020Media is a UK host specialising in hosting popular content mangement systems like WordPress, Joomla and Drupal. We also provide standard PHP, ASP, Java and ColdFusion hosting platforms for any website.
Code Poet is a resource for anyone building sites with WordPress
No matter whether you freelance on a solo basis, lead a small web shop, make plugins in a dark closet, or crack the whip at a large design firm, the aim of Code Poet is to become your go-to source of information and resources to help you expand your WordPress skills and know-how. To make you better at what you do. To make it easier to make your living and look great doing it.
How well do you know WordPress? Take the Code Poet quiz and figure out where you rank.