WordPress is a great platform to build websites with, but it can be frustrating to add something as simple as a line break. This is because the visual editor strips them out as fast as you can add them.
As with most problems that one encounters related to WordPress, someone has figured out a solution. In this case, Tim Reynolds has created a small plugin that preserves line breaks by using the short code [br] instead of the normal html <br />. Brilliant! Thanks Tim. But if you want to use the shortcode, you need to install the plugin.
Some people have a hard time understanding the Add Image dialog box used to upload images to WordPress. It is important to get this right as it will effect the quality of your blog posts and pages. To add a photo to WordPress, first place your cursor inside the WordPress editor where you want the image to be uploaded to.
Next click the Add Media button next to the words Upload/Insert. This opens the Add Media dialog box.
Once the image has finished uploading the box expands to show you various options as follows:
I am very pleased to report that I have won a Trent Hills & District Business Excellence Award in the category Entrepreneurial Spirit sponsored by Welch LLP.
The award recognizes a small business or home office with three or less employees and operating more than three years, demonstrating excellence in one of more category: customer service, job creation, workplace environment, growth in business, product quality, new and innovative products, service or manufacturing techniques.
Congratulations to the Trent Hills & District Chamber of Commerce for putting on an excellent awards ceremony last night at Island Park in Campbellford.
Today I was asked by the Trent Hills & District Chamber of Commerce to pose for this photo showing me accepting my nomination for the 2012 “Entrepreneurial Spirit Award for Small Business” from Chamber President Schelle Holmes.
Will I win? Heck I don’t know, but it sure is nice to be nominated.
Thanks to everyone who has been so supportive of my small business.
Looking for a nice WordPress contact form that will stay in front of your visitors eyes until the moment they need it?
Try DynamicWP Contact Form. Worked great for me right out of the box. Click once to open. The form slides out from the left viewport border. Click again to close. The contact button stays in a fixed position on the viewport as you scroll down the page.
This Ajax based plugin includes a simple anti-spam question and room for links to various social network pages.
Just got a call from someone claiming to be from “Windows”. They wanted to let me know there was a problem with my computer.
They started by telling me to look for the Windows key on my keyboard. The one with the four flags on it, they said. When I told them there was no such key like that on my computer, they insisted there was. I said there wasn’t. …pause. But yes sir there is. I repeated there wasn’t. They repeated there was. To help move the conversation along, I asked why there would be a Windows key on my Mac computer? They said, Oh sorry sir, we are Windows only, and hung up.
It seems pretty obvious to me that this person’s sole intent was to extract login information, cash, or both from me. Don’t be fooled if someone calls you out of the blue to tell you that they have discovered a problem with your computer, bank account, credit card. This is a scam.
Never give your personal or login information to anyone that calls you. That goes for bank information, Facebook, anything. No legitimate company will ever call you out of the blue to ask for personal information. Give them nothing. Even if they call directly from Windows!
Sixteen years ago, Cami Renfrow was lying close to death beneath the weight of her overturned vehicle. Moments earlier, she had been flung through the windscreen of her car and hurled with great force face first against the side of an embankment. Her wrecked car, which she had just been thrown free of, landed first above her and then fell back down squarely upon her already battered body. The insult crushed her with such force few would have guessed that she might survive the ordeal.
Passerby’s arrived immediately and were quick to organize themselves to lift the vehicle off of her. Paramedics were soon on scene to pick up the shattered remains of her body and to whisk her off to intensive care. This in itself would make a good story, however what happened to Cami during and after this spectacular one vehicle collision is even more intriguing.
Cami experienced what is commonly referred to as a near death experience and while her body healed surprisingly, perhaps even miraculously quickly, it has taken her the last decade and a half to put what happened to her into words. Largely this is because words fail when trying to describe the indescribable.
Cami contacted me a short time ago through Flickr to let me know she was planning on releasing her story as a self published e-book called, “Dance Through It” and was interested in using my spider web photo to help illustrate some of the concepts explained in the text. I find it fascinating that an abstract photo I took of a spider’s web could be used to help convey such complex ideas as are considered in the book.
According to the text, far from being fearful, Cami’s experience was more sublime than scary… and above all else, life altering. While Cami did return to life, pain and eventual recovery, her journey to the other side and back changed absolutely everything for her, bringing new meaning to her life and the very concept of what it means to be alive.
This e-book will be of interest to anyone facing death or who knows someone facing death. Wait – that’s everyone. Okay, so this book will be of interest to everyone.
And for the cost of a $5 foot-long, it could change your life’s perspective too.
Every once in a while I come across a tool that is so useful, it becomes an instant favourite. Free ruler for Mac OS X is a small utility program I came across quite some time ago and frankly I’m not sure how I would live without it. I use it almost every day.
Free Ruler was created by “a person named Pascal” and is a virtual ruler that can measure just about anything on your computer screen.
There are few controls to get in the way (everything is controlled through the menu items) and it does exactly what you’d expect it to. It measures in pixels, inches, picas and centimeters. There is a horizontal ruler and a vertical ruler which you can use independently or together.
I often use the ruler to measure space on sites I am working on. Need to nudge a header graphic over a few pixels? No problem. This measuring tool allows you to reach into any virtual space and measure it accurately and quickly. What more could you want?
Flickr is a great place to store and share photos and flowing photos from your Flickr stream to your website couldn’t be easier.
One of the best ways to share photos from Flickr on your website is to use the embed code from a Flickr slideshow. Any page on Flickr that displays the slideshow icon above can be embedded. Below is a slideshow of my entire Flickr stream. Slideshows can be created from sets or photos with specific tags. The possibilities are endless.
Press the play button to start the slide show. Hover over the slideshow to reveal thumbnails and controls. Take your cursor away from the slide show to hide the controls.
The four arrows on the bottom right will expand the display to full screen. While in full screen mode, you can view more information related to the photo by clicking the Show Info button at the top right of the screen. The embed code is available from the Share button also available in full screen mode.
The only down side of the Flickr embed code is that because it uses Adobe Flash, it will not render on iPads or iPhones. For this reason it is probably best to keep it off of your front page.
Flickr is free to join and offers full service accounts for only $25 per year. Let me know if you would like your Flickr photos displayed on your website.
Anyone who spends any time working on a computer should be familiar with the following three keyboard shortcuts. Cut – Copy – Paste. The amount of time these will save you compared to selecting them from the menu is immeasurable, as long as you can remember them. So commit these to memory and take your computer writing skills to the next level.