48 blogs & 60 users

Posts Tagged ‘admin’

WordPress 2.8.1

July 10th, 2009

I’ve upgraded the site to WordPress µ 2.8.1, which contains a number of improvements on the previous 2.7.1 release.

Most of the dashboard pages now have Screen Options with additional options such as number of columns, and widgets now take advantage of object oriented programming — for the end user, widget management is once again drag-and-drop, and you can even deactivate widgets without deleting them.

As part of the upgrade, my Simpler CSS plugin has been enabled site-wide so that you can customize your theme with your own CSS. You’ll find it as “Custom CSS” under the Appearance menu.

Custom CSS

Custom CSS

Important: the old video embedding system has been deactivated for inefficiency, and replaced with a new site-wide installation of Viper’s Video Quicktags, which adds new, simpler-to-use buttons in the Add New Post text editor.

New buttons to embed YouTube, Vimeo and other videos

New buttons to embed YouTube, Vimeo and other videos

Hence, [swf URL width height] style tags are no longer supported, and [YouTube URL] embeds must be replaced with [youtube]YouTube URL[/youtube]. I’ve made an attempt to automatically correct these YouTube embeds in posts through the database.

Take advantage of the faster WordPress µ backend, the easier-to-use video embeds, and the ability to customize the design of your blog with custom CSS!

Hello, 2.7

January 30th, 2009

It’s here.

Upon logging in to your blog’s backend, you will immediately notice the new WordPress 2.7 interface. Play around with it, explore its features, and get used to it.

Upcoming Upgrade to WordPress 2.7

October 29th, 2008

With the upcoming release of WordPress 2.7 on November 10, you can expect an upgrade of the PersonalLog system to WordPress mu 2.7 by the end of November, whenever the WordPress mu code base is synced.

The new release of WordPress is expected to bring many significant changes, including drastic (but good) changes to the admin interface, among other features.

Here’s a preview of what the Write Post screen may look like:

New Post screen in WordPress 2.7

Sorry, but this means that we’re all going to need to learn the new interface. I do agree that the new interface is significantly more user-friendly, even though it may take some time to get used to.

Read more about the new changes.

The significant changes in this new release mean that the admin menus (drop-down) inside the admin backend will be disabled today, and the admin menus on the frontend might not work with 2.7.

I’m sure that you’ll appreciate the changes.

Edit: this also means that PersonalLog will be skipping the 2.6.3 upgrade.

Updates and Features

August 9th, 2008

Having upgraded to WordPress µ 2.6 a very short while ago, there have been some changes to PersonalLog.

First, the “Theme Test Drive” function has been removed in favour of the new theme preview functionality built into the WordPress core. Previously, PersonalLog bloggers could go to Design » Theme Test Drive to show a specific theme for themselves. However, with the new built-in feature, all you have to do is click on the theme image, and you’ll be taken to your blog, shown with a particular theme. (Also, the themes are no longer cluttered on one page, and are separated into multiple pages.)

Second, the custom styling of the admin interface was removed because it was not fully compatible with recent versions of WordPress. Instead, the backend was reverted to the default style with several modifications: the navigation was moved to the very top, and drop-down menus were added. This design is more futureproof.

The Counterize plugin was removed because it did not integrate with WordPress 2.5, let alone 2.6. Thankfully, very few users were using it, and removing it decreased the size of the database tables as well. In the future, I’ll notify users using a particular plugin if I’m disabling it.

The WordPress Admin Bar was updated to a more recent version which has configurable options (see Settings » Admin Bar). It should streamline your blog administration tasks and look good as well.

Fifth, the Flash-based media uploader has caused a lot of grief for myself and others. Fortunately, in the new release of WordPress 2.6, all you have to do is click on “Try the Browser uploader instead” which will make the simple uploader the default method for your account.

Sixth, gravatar support was enhanced in 2.6, which means some themes (particularly newly added and future themes) will show little graphics beside the names of authors in comments.

Seventh, a number of themes were removed as a result of incompatibility and bad design. I’m also about to add a few more themes.

Eighth, some plugins were updated for 2.6, including HidePost.

Finally, you’ll also see some new functionality thanks to the WordPress update — every post is now saved with revisions, so if you save a post multiple times, each version will be retained. You can even compare revisions side-by-side with differences highlighted. There’s also word count in the Write Post screen, showing you the word count below the “Save” and “Publish” buttons. There is now also a Press This link (see the Shortcuts section on the Write Post page) that lets you write a blog post about any Web page, video, or image on the Internet; all you do is go to the page that you want to blog (be it a video or blog post), click on the Press This bookmark that you’ve added to your favourites, and a pop-up will appear from which you can write your post without leaving the page. Cool feature!

More themes

April 9th, 2008

Blue Green:

Blue Green

Blue Zinfandel Enhanced:

Blue Zinfandel Enhanced

Not much to say… but more themes are coming!

Test out any theme

April 8th, 2008

I know that some of our bloggers want to try out new themes or switch to another design.

Here’s a new feature that should make this easier for you: “Theme Test Drive”. It lets you set a new theme that you (the blog admin) can preview, but the public won’t see the changes until you set the theme for the public under the Presentation->Themes page. In other words, it lets you “test drive” different themes without subjecting your users to the same experiment. EDIT: newer versions of WordPress have a built-in theme preview feature that you can use right on the Appearance/Themes control panel.

ImageShack

At the same time, I’ve added a new theme called “Tech Blue”.

Tech Blue screenshot