A major WordPress upgrade is coming: WordPress 2.5. Here is my breakdown of new, exciting features.
WordPress has been a primary source of income for me. It has been the driving force behind my success in my local communities. A major WordPress upgrade is coming: WordPress 2.5. Because of it’s impending release, I will be postponing the completion of several projects in order to be able to support the newer, better WP 2.5. Please enjoy looking at some screenshots of 2.5! Click any shot to make it bigger.
A total revamp has taken place. A light-blue and orange color scheme looks progressive, some say it’s too artsy. As you can see, the new color scheme is fresh, and definitely unique. Use of the color orange shows important HUD-style information. You can see it used in the comments menu, where a count of unapproved comments is shown.
The administration panels have been “divided” into the left tabs and the right tabs. The left tabs reflect pages that will effect your site’s content. The right tabs reflect settings for the site, such as plugins.
From the Dashboard, you can see several tasks, including links to write posts (blog entries) and pages. The shortcut to the page writing screen is a welcome addition.
Developers have also revamped the post writing experience, including MUCH better media management, and plugin-free media embedding capabilities. You can easily embed images, audio, and video with WordPress 2.5. Also, rather than uploading, you can hotlink media from another website with ease. When you upload media, you can upload MULTIPLE files at the same time.
When adding photos, you have a new size available: medium. It’s an intermediate between thumbnails and full-sized. The photo add screen will let you apply css classes to images using a pleasant wizard-style GUI. Theme developers should note that adding css classes align-left, align-right, and align-center to your css will allow users to utilize these new layout features.

Uploaded media also appears in the Manage > Media Library tab, where you can easily flip through sort and filter uploads by file type and search by name. The media listing shows where certain assets have been used, and offers a permalink to the asset.
WordPress search will examine posts and pages for content in WP 2.5 without additional plugins or hacks. The WordPress community’s cries have been answered. Previously, I preferred using the Search Everything plugin.
A new class has been in the WordPress codebase, called $wp->prepare. It basically takes user input and sanitizes it for safe database storage. WordPress 2.5 expects developers to begin using $wp-prepare to ramp up security.
Work on the XML-RPC interface has been completed as well. As for performance? I don’t know what the status is. I imagine that all fortifications will need to remain in place for high-traffic sites.
WordPress 2.5 is expected to be completed by March 10, 2008.
Brad Kovach is an award-winning web developer from Afton, Wyoming. In his spare time, he enjoys drumming on Rock Band, and playing with this website.
When I redesigned my website, I had anticipated a design that was color centric. I wanted the colors to be changeable so that the site’s look wouldn’t become stale. I want to know what you think…
When I redesigned my website, I had anticipated a design that was color centric. I wanted the colors to be changeable so that the site’s look wouldn’t become stale. I want to know what you think…

Brad Kovach is an award-winning web developer from Afton, Wyoming. In his spare time, he enjoys drumming on Rock Band, and playing with this website.
Making it to Digg/Popular is the dream of many. Traffic spikes, thousands of visitors, and poor planning can cause catastrophic failure if you don’t plan carefully. Here are 10 tips to make sure failure isn’t an option.
Making it to Digg/Popular is the dream of many. Traffic spikes, thousands of visitors, and poor planning can cause catastrophic failure if you don’t plan carefully. Here are 10 tips to make sure failure isn’t an option.
Disclaimer: This is what I’ve heard. I’ve never been Dugg.
A responsive web server is crucial to serving visitors. Lethargic websites repel visitors, and ultimately you lose the Digg. If a request hasn’t been cached, it needs to be generated quickly, and the only way to do that is with a powerful server. My web host, hostrocket.com, guarantees that my web server has 4.4 ghz of processor and at least 2 gigabytes of RAM. That should do it. If you can, Gzip content.
A responsive web server is nothing if your “tubes” are plugged or are small. If your host is capping your bandwidth, you’re screwed. If you have lots of media, you’re definitely screwed. My host claims redundant OC-3/OC-12 lines.
WordPress users especially! Database driven websites will grind to a halt when they make Digg/Popular. If you cache your site, your database servers won’t take a significant hit. Most content management systems include or have caching systems available. Drupal has caching built in. Wordpress users should get the wp-cache plugin and LEAVE IT ON.
If you have a video, and you’re pretentious enough to host it yourself, do the world a favor and upload it to a video sharing site, like YouTube or break.com, and then link to it from your page. They have bandwidth to supply streaming video to thousands… you don’t.
It also doesn’t hurt to visit your site on caching systems like Coral before you make Digg/Popular. Simply add .nyud.net after your domain. My website, for example, would be http://www.bradkovach.com.nyud.net on the Coral network.
If you have an RSS enabled site, show it off! Use the ubiquitous feed icon… Make sure your HTML declares that you have an RSS feed to light up feed finders in all modern browsers.
Put this between the <head> </head> on all pages.
<link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="[website
title here]" href="[link to RSS feed here]" />
All the basics should be on your site. Make sure clicking the logo takes you to your home page. If there are dropdowns, make sure the user knows before he or she mouses-over. Add chronological context so that by “going left” users know that they are visiting older context and “going right” is newer content (or vice-versa).
Search is a must. If your CMS doesn’t do this, use Google SiteSearch. It’s free.
Make sure your website works in all major browsers. At least cover the big four: IE6, IE7, Firefox, and Safari.
If your users are coming from Digg, make it easy for them to support your content. Use Digg Tools to make sure your content has a Digg button that works.
Digg users appreciate sarcasm. If you have opinions, let it show. Make sure diggers know that you are addressing THEM. Diggers also have tendencies that they go crazy over. Ron Paul and Apple gossip are categories that make people salivate/soak undies. The video game phenom Portal is another excellent topic.
Lists obey the f-shaped pattern and help your visitors get through your content quickly. Diggers are busy people. Make sure you help them speed through the internet. Don’t consume their time. Unless you have games.
A well constructed article will be organized. A little pre-writing goes a long way. I have this list scratched out in a Moleskine cahier that never leaves my desk. It isn’t much, but it helped me organized the flow of my article. Diggers are know-it-alls. They appreciate good grammar and a spell-checked document. Proofread and find mistakes.
Brad Kovach is an award-winning web developer from Afton, Wyoming. In his spare time, he enjoys drumming on Rock Band, and playing with this website.
I’d like to be the first to introduce the 7.0 redesign, aka Brad Kovach zen.0. It is designed to be a simple but elegant theme that facilitates the newer, mob-like mentality of the Internet.
I’d like to be the first to introduce the 7.0 redesign, aka Brad Kovach zen.0. It is designed to be a simple but elegant theme that facilitates the newer, mob-like mentality of the Internet.
It provides a visual refresh while enhancing usability. It’s built with design concepts in mind, such as a baseline grid, although it isn’t perfect.
For now, you should only enjoy it (if you like it). Everything works as it should. If something looks funny, the reason is that your browser is too old. If you enjoy Internet Explorer, try Firefox before upgrading to Internet Explorer 7. I have tested this site in Internet Explorer 6, Internet Explorer 7, Firefox and Safari.
Brad Kovach is an award-winning web developer from Afton, Wyoming. In his spare time, he enjoys drumming on Rock Band, and playing with this website.
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