How to Build a Killer Team of Writers for Massive Outreach
In this article, I’m going to walk you through how you can find and manage content…
In this article, I’m going to walk you through how you can find and manage content…
In our previous article we discussed the basics of design thinking. In this article we’ll learn…
What You’ll Be Creating WordPress Gutenberg is coming soon to a website near you. It will…
Get Our FREE Guide to Landing a Remote Job You Love Say goodbye to the 9-to-5….
You’ve made the awesome decision to launch an eCommerce store. Now…where do you build it? When…
As many site creators know, it’s daunting to find images to represent the message you’re trying…
Illustrations of any kind are quite a hot topic lately. Today, we will be expanding on…
Even today, backlinks are still the #1 ranking factor. That’s why everyone that does SEO is…
Get Our Free Ultimate Guide to Coding for Beginners Make a plan for learning the tech…
Find Out in Three Minutes (or Less!) If a Career in Tech Is Right for You…
I recently tweeted out about the awesome boot menu option that NetApp has introduced in Ontap…
Trying to make your WordPress site faster is an already technically complex process, further obscured by all the jargon you have to understand. Here’s an overview of some commonly used site “speed up” terms. I hope it helps demystify the process!
Browser caching
Imagine your web page is like a puzzle. The puzzle pieces are CSS, JavaScript and image files. When you visit a web page, the browser has to retrieve all those puzzle pieces from the server, then assemble them correctly to make your web page.
Browser caching allows the browser to keep some of those puzzle pieces in place, that is, stored in the browser itself (on your computer), so that the next time you visit that page, it doesn’t have to fetch them again from the server.
The purpose of browser caching is to make repeat visits to the same site much faster for the visitor.
Sometimes, you need to create a fully functional landing page quickly and efficiently. The best way…
If you’re in need of some VueJS admin templates (built with Bootstrap) then have we got…
It’s no secret that we’re big fans of podcasts — their beautiful storytelling and engaging news…
Early this year Google announced that it would start warning users when a site they visited…
July is the month that brings hight of summer and so for this month’s batch of…
Get Our Free Ultimate Guide to Coding for Beginners Make a plan for learning the tech…
Many issues that arise on your WordPress site will be plugin-related. Whether it’s a conflict between plugins, between a plugin and your theme, a buggy update, or whatever else may happen, the standard troubleshooting procedure is to deactivate all your plugins, then turn them back on one at a time until the issue reappears. This process lets you isolate exactly which plugin is at the source of the conflict. However, if you have more than a handful of plugins on your site, which almost everyone does, this can be a time-consuming and frustrating process.
Enter….. Plugin Detective
Get Our FREE Guide to Landing a Remote Job You Love Say goodbye to the 9-to-5….
Get Our Free Ultimate Guide to Coding for Beginners Make a plan for learning the tech…