Category: Wordpress

  • Skye News WordPress Theme by Elevate & nomad-one

    Earlier in the year, a well known premium wordpress theme developer(Nathan Rice) announced that he would be embarking on an open source wordpress theme project and that he was looking for designers who wanted to collaborate with him. Of course as a wordpress nut I jumped at the opportunity and offered my services.

    I whipped up a this quick design and zipped it through to him a little later. Since then Nathan has been quietly busy getting his ducks in a row with what has now launched as www.elevatethemes.com, a freemium theme project.

    The design I sent Nathan has formed the basis for what was released as the first elevate theme called Skye News. Nathan has significantly simplified the design, but has packed some really great features into the coding of this new release which can be demo’ed here.

    I think what I’m going to attempt is to download this baby and try to style it to look a little closer to my original design which I will then send to Nathan to add to elevate themes as a Skye News alternative.

    Go check out elevate themes yourself and if you’re a bit of a theme design why not chip and and send some designs of your own or offer to code up someone else’s design?

    Check out www.elevatethemes.com and gime a shout if you like the theme and need some theme customization.

  • A few ways Firefox rocks my day

    I’ve used Firefox for years & it’s grown into a real gem of a tool. Not so much for it’s standards support, but due to a great community of add-on developers. It’s also just geekishly cool & makes a huge difference in my day as a designer, developer, blogger & general surfer. A Few Reasons why:

    Firebug

    Firebug

    – ranks as my favourite add-on for FF. It makes my task of web dev so much easier, helps find problems and teaches me a few things about where I’ve gone wrong in my code.

    Fireftp

    Fireftp

    – Helps you upload to your sites from your browser in 2 ticks. It’s all right in front of you and makes for a nice seemless testing routine.

    Twitterfox

    TwitterFox

    – I did find tweeting a hassle without this add-on and now I find keeping track of my tweets & tweeple a breeze.

    GTD Inbox

    GTD inbox

    It takes your regular gmail & jacks it up for super web GTD. Projects, next actions and the works to keep you productive.

    Fireshot

    Fireshot

    I take a fair amount of screenshots & Fireshot makes it so easy to grab a screen, edit it and then do with it what you like.

    Scribfire

    Scribefire

    I just started using it & it already looks like a Windows Live Writer replacement. Faster & more convenient, I now blog and surf at the same time.

    So, What do you add to your firefox?

  • WPREMIX theme gets a well deserved overhaul

    A few weeks ago you may have noticed a very disgruntled post on my blog regarding a theme I purchased. The Theme is called WPremix and since my post a number of developments have taken place.

    Firstly R. Bhavesh, the theme developer responded to my post and refunded my purchase. We then started a discussion regarding my gripe, that being the wordpress templates not being editable through the admin post/page edit interface.

    I recommended Bhavesh use custom fields but I agree as he said, that it would still be a bit of a mission for the average user to edit many custom fields for each template.

    Bhavesh subsequently contracted a plugin developer to fix up the template editor he had initially sold along with the plugin. After a few rounds of Beta testing, which I was part of it seems the new WP Remix 2.0 is strides ahead of version on and truly a great tool for turning wordpress into a customisable CMS.

    wpremix

    One of the downsides is the styling of the new version, though changeable through various theme options is a little less slick than before, though that’s not too much of a problem for someone with a little CSS knowledge. WP Remix is a great developer tool for web designers working with wordpress and wanting to rapidly develop custom sites for their clients.

    The new version comes with even more templates, 50 I think which are coded to comply with web standards and browser differences.

    WP Remix 2.0 – the only theme on the net that offers WYSIWYG page template editing.

    Over 50 page templates to choose from. Web standards, Colorschemes, Usability, grid, typography… you ask for it, it has all in it!

    g1  h1-blue   home4

    in-12    home2

    Only one problem for me is my AVG anti-virus keeps recognising the advanced plugin editor file as a virus and either deletes is or puts it into my virus vault. Something Bhavesh has not managed to resolve yet. I believe it has been tested using Kaspersky and is free of viruses, but some part of the coding seems to show up suspicious by AVG Free.

    I have a new project which I think this theme would be perfect for and will post up a link once it’s done for testing and showcase purposes.

    Bhavesh has also promised all add-ons and additional templates will be provided for free to buyers. So far so good and I think this project is gonna be one to watch as it grows.

    I’d love to see this level of theme templating mixed with Woothemes’ slick coolness.

  • Proud of my XHTML & WordPress students’ progress

    I’m so proud of the guys who have taken my basic HTML course I have been teaching at Friends of Design college in Cape Town. Friends of Design is a hip new design & web college based in Cape Town. They have quickly made a name for themselves and I believe are set to change the way students launch themselves into the creative & web industries.

    I’ve never taught a formal class like this before and it’s been a challenge, though a really rewarding challenge. The course is one of the reasons for my slow blogging of late.

    I’ve just completed teaching a 3 week evening class covering HTML & XHTML basics as well as CSS. The cool thing is I never studied html, so this time around I had a chance to learn a few lesser known html thingies I never even knew existed.

    Learning while I  teach

    The course covered everything from the starting <html> tags through to <div> layouts. I had to cover a few areas like table layouts which I absolutely hated but helped the students get a good idea of how and how not to use tables. After completing the unit covering accessible tables & forms I started gaining a newfound respect for these 2 areas of html which I had a really bad relationship with previously.

    Other challenges which helped me with my own HTML skills, were the questions and problems the students would bring up which forced me to dig a little deeper into the subject. It’s quite a humbling experience when a newbie comes up with a problem you have no idea how to fix and you still need to teach them how to go about trouble shooting the whole thing. More often than not it’s a really small issue like a misplaced closing tag or some or other character out of it’s proper place. This is where colour coded editors like dreamweaver and text mate come in handy. I find my students are really lost without the colour coding as it clearly allows them to distinguish between html, comments and php codes.

    To help give the students a more detailed resource I had to do some scouting around and found sitepoint’s code references for both HTML & CSS which are of the best reference resources on the subject for beginners. I found the WC3 pages way too ugly and academic in their approach to teaching html.

    Student Work to be proud of

    libertadHandre v.d Merwe is one of the students who has show exceptional talent. He has progressed to the point of launching his site(www.libertad.co.za) a few days after the HTML module was completed. He’s already quit his job “not my doing”, and is well on his way to entering the world of web development.

    The challenge of teaching WordPress development

    My class has 6 students and we have currently moved into the next module which is 4 weeks of wordpress. I don’t know of any other wordpress courses running locally, and one of the main challenges was setting the curriculum and developing a process to take the students through from scratch.

    My students have never been exposed to wordpress before this class, so we started with an overview of what a cms is, then into specifics about what wordpress is.

    I’m hoping to wrote a text book which should be completed by the end of the 4th week but so far it’s been slow going with all my other commitments.

    Some of the basic principles of how wordpress works have proven to be huge challenges to explain to students who have only just recovered from a blast of HTML, XHTML & CSS. There were a few things i thought would be extremely simple to understand that I struggled to get across. This part has been a real growing experience for me in terms of teaching.

    The exciting thing is last night we started converting the students’ html templates from the first module into simple themes and loaded them up live.

    At the end of the course I hope to post the students’ portfolios and help them find some gigs to start them on their way to a new career in web development.

  • WordPress keeps going, WP 2.6 is well on it’s way

    One of the great things about wordpress is the speed at which it has developed over the last few years from a simple blogging platform to a much more advanced system that can be used as a CMS as well.

    WordPress 2.6 Beta has been released with a few minor updates and functional improvements. Ryan Boren posted a list of improvements including the following to be found in the 2.6 beta Version which is already available for download and beta testing.

    Matt Mullenweg, Founder of the platform had the following to say about this speedy update from the much hyped 2.5.

  • Checkout the new WordPress Meetup site

    Heads up. Today is WPCPT3 at the Bandwidth Barn from 4pm – 7pm. We’ve just launched our new theme designed by yours(that’s me) truly and coded by Paul Weingartz who did a fantabulous job. Check us out at www.wordpress.org.za

    meetup-site