Building Creative Websites Can Be Easy. Here’s How
Web designers, ready for some good news? We have some for you, and it involves designing…
Web designers, ready for some good news? We have some for you, and it involves designing…
Maintaining a steady flow of traffic to your WordPress site isn’t only dependent on constantly producing brand new content. Updating old content is a great practice to keep benefitting from the posts you’ve already worked on. It’s possible to take advantage of Google’s freshness algorithm and generate a new burst of traffic for the updated content, as well as provide a better user experience for visitors to your site ensuring they never find old or irrelevant information.
In this post I’ll cover:
Getting the right tool for the job on hand doesn’t have to be difficult. The best…
Building a website traditionally involves a variety of technologies which may work across all major browsers,…
PHP development has been pretty fast in the past few years. At the time of this…
I’ve updated this guide based on the recent changes to the PageSpeed tool.
Listen, let’s keep it real, PageSpeed Insights is a tool best used by developers. Its intentions are good but it’s not targeted at the average WordPress site owner. Even with the recent introduction of some WordPress-specific messaging, many aspects of the report are too technical to be clearly actionable.
In this guide I’ll try to translate what PageSpeed is talking about and let you know which factors you can control, as a WordPress site owner, and which you can’t.
The basic message of PageSpeed Insights could be translated as follows:
Responsive Design may be here to stay but there are many issues that need to be…
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Image compression is found in every native media format. However, the difference between GIF, PNG, and…
In this article I want to put together a few solid techniques for building big, oversized…
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jQuery is undoubtedly the most popular JavaScript library, (almost) every website on this planet is using…
Not every designer gets a chance to work on the design of a popular brand or…
The Transformation module is a tremendous addition in CSS3, it takes the way we manipulate elements…
People are amazingly self-deceptive. We allow ourselves to believe many things that aren’t true, simply because…
It’s time again for us to share fresh resources for our fellow web developers. Our collection…
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When building a responsive website we’ll need to test it in multiple screen-sizes to make sure…
The Time To First Byte (TTFB), or server response time, of your WordPress site can be an important indicator of performance. It doesn’t represent the whole picture, but a very specific part in the process.
Time to First Byte is a measure of how fast your server responds when someone tries to visit a page on your site. Specifically, it’s measuring how long it takes from the time the browser asks the server for the page, to when the browser receives the first piece of data from the server.
Visitors want sites to feel fast, so the sooner some meaningful content is displayed on the screen, the better. TTFB can influence this – the faster the server responds, the faster content can get to the user.
The Web has changed a lot compared to when I just got started in this industry….
As a web designer or design agency, you’ve learned to keep a close watch on design…