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Premium WordPress Plugins Discussed

Premium plugins have been around for a while now. They started off as a way for people to express their support for a plugin developer and over the past year have started to take off. GravityForms, PluginBuddy and CodeCanyon have all contributed to the rise to prominence. But where next for premium plugins? This post explores.

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WPShout Hacked (But Everything’s Fine Now)

As you may have heard, on Friday evening I got what was to be the first of a couple of emails from some very helpful people telling me that there was a big message up from Google saying that WPShout contained viruses, spyware, the lot! I took a look for myself and sure enough, WPShout had been hacked somehow. This isn't good. I'm fairly happy with my security; there are lots of little tips and tricks I use that make the site harder to hack than most, leaving me with the impression most hackers just wouldn't bother and move on to the thousands more WordPress blogs without the extra layer of security. I was wrong, evidently.

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WPShout Needs Your Help!

Hello! It's a new WPShout article! That hasn't happened for way too long! Sorry for the unexplained absence. What have I been doing? Excellent question. I've been uber busy at college, to answer it. In this post I just wanted to clear up a couple of things and ask for your help in maintaining WPShout in the future.

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A Guide For Selling WordPress Themes

Recently there's been a lot of (mis) information around about "how to start your own premium WordPress themes site". They make all make it sound fairly easy: just make a design, hack it into a WordPress theme, buckle on a zillion theme options using the old Woo options panel and you have yourself a wonderful theme that'll make you rich. Not so, this tutorial explains some of the things to look out for when building a premium theme.

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Really Easy Custom Post Backgrounds For WordPress

As I mentioned before, I've been having great fun with the new Nometet.com design. It's now sporting a feature that allows the author to set a custom background for the post just by uploading an image. This image doesn't even need to be the correct size; that's all done on the fly. Uploading isn't hard either; I've implemented an uploader that sits inside a meta box so the hardest bit is choosing the image! In this post we'll have a look at how it's done.

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Art Direction For WordPress

"Art direction", custom post designs, whatever you want to call them have taken off in a big way recently. First it was Jason Santa Maria amongst others, then Smashing Magazine picked up on it and as a trend it exploded. For good reason too; they're awesome and great fun to do. In this post we'll see how art direction and WordPress can be combined to create something awesome.

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WPShift Now Available From $29.95

Ever since I and Alex Cragg launched our WordPress theme store earlier this year, it's been chugging along nicely. We still only offer the one theme, ShiftNews, but we've been quietly updating it. Just last Friday we pushed out an update that adds in support for a couple of the new 3.0 functions. Yesterday we also introduced a rather interesting new pricing plan which makes ShiftNews available for a fantastically low $29.95!

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Featured Content For WordPress

It's surprisingly easy to build a neat little featured content area in WordPress, using a custom query to grab a couple of posts from a selected category, tag or even custom field. In this post we'll find out how to build a simple featured content area for your blog, rather like the one I recently added to WPShout.

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Backwards Compatible WordPress 3.0 Functions

We all know that WordPress 3.0 is coming and there are a whole plethora of new features, but actually adding them to themes? I had to do that today in an update to WPShift's ShiftNews. Trouble was I wanted to ensure the theme remained compatible with 2.9 and below, which meant I needed some good ol' conditionals. In this post we'll find out how to make backwards compatible 3.0 functions.

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Statistically, You’re Not Going To Read This

We've all heard it before: people don't read, they scan. But yet, we never really try and do anything about it. Or at least we never do anything effective about it. Sure, things like bold and italics do help, but they don't solve the underlying problem that people don't read. Which is a problem for people like me. It takes a good couple of hours to write a WPShout post so I'd like to think it's appreciated. Turns out I'm wrong; in this post we'll find out how.

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Using WordPress As A CMS

I'll let you into a little secret. WordPress is a CMS. Arguably it's a simple one, but it's still a CMS; I'm currently writing my content and using WordPress as a system to manage my content. WordPress needn't just manage content for my blog though. With pages and page templates you've got a quick and easy way of making a killer content management system.

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Smashing Custom Fields

Just a quick note to let you know that my first article on SmashingMagazine has been published. It's all about custom fields. Specifically, Extending WordPress With Custom Fields, a great little topic. In the post I go through just about everything I can think of that's awesome to do with custom fields. One of the topics, setting a different background with each post is something I'll expand on here on Shout at a later date.

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Looking Forward To WordPress 3.0

I don't want to join most other blogs in publishing a useless list of features that will be coming to WordPress 3.o. Instead, I thought I'd do it a bit differently. Recently I interviewed Adii, Nathan Rice, Alex Cragg, Cory Miller and Ian Stewart. In that post I asked "what in 3.0 are you looking forward to working with?" today's post will have a look at what 3.0 means for themes.

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You Don’t Need A Plugin For Everything

I've recently being developing a new design for my first ever WordPress powered site, Nometet.com. The design is looking a bit shabby at the moment, that's the kind way of putting it! I digress though. The new design is what I'd call advanced WordPress. It's got things like a background that is automatically resized (ie the background-image), a choice of three post templates, a fancy review section which holds the score and things like blockquotes that change depending on which category you're in.

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Premium Frameworks Reviewed

Of late commercial frameworks have started appearing everywhere. This post will try and make sense of it all, comparing Frugal, Headway, Builder, Genesis and Elemental. That's all the commercial frameworks I could think of bar Thesis, who didn't reply to me emails. This is an unbiased, unaffiliated look at what your options are if you want something to build more WordPress sites off.

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WordPress Wizards Week: Day 5

After the astounding success of the Why WordPress series which ran last year, this week I'll be asking five WordPress Wizards about what's next for themes, WordPress and frameworks in what is a slightly more focused discussion than last time!

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WordPress Wizards Week: Day 4

After the astounding success of the Why WordPress series which ran last year, this week I'll be asking five WordPress Wizards about what's next for themes, WordPress and frameworks in what is a slightly more focused discussion than last time! Today, Cory Miller from iThemes is in the hot seat.

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WordPress Wizards Week: Day 3

After the astounding success of the Why WordPress series which ran last year, this week I’ll be asking five WordPress Wizards about what’s next for themes, WordPress and frameworks in slightly more focused discussion than last time! The series continues today with Alex Cragg, co-founder of WPShift which enticingly has "made a theme that lets you build your own layout just by dragging and dropping."

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