They do say all good things must come to an end
It looks like I’m leaving Korea. It’s been a long yet adventurous journey, a great chapter in my life. I’m finding it hard to say goodbye.
I am also a writer. A front-end developer. A gardener. A small-town Alabama kid just trying to figure out whatever it is that that folks are supposed to figure out on this journey. Welcome to my little home on the web.
It looks like I’m leaving Korea. It’s been a long yet adventurous journey, a great chapter in my life. I’m finding it hard to say goodbye.
I’ve finally finished the Options theme style that many users have waited for — a dark theme with beautiful typography set on a white background.
Currently, WordPress has very little to offer for users wanting to run a membership site. I’d like to see that change. I’m looking for developers that are willing to take on the project.
Here’s a few reasons why my Options WordPress theme is one of my least favorite themes.
Jeff Chandler at Weblog Tools Collection wrote a post titled Stop Blaming the WordPress Team, in which he basically argues that the users shouldn’t blame the WordPress developers if a plugin breaks with an upgrade.
How to filter the_content() function in WordPress and switch it to excerpts with a child theme.
I told you I’d have a new theme club sometime or another, didn’t I? Well, here it is — ThemeHybrid.com
I just stopped by WordPress Extend to find a few “ideas” to rate down, which is part of my nightly routine. Tonight, I was a bit surprised to see that there was a new WordPress Themes Directory.
WordPress 2.6 (Tyner) is out, which means it’s time for a round of WordPress theme and plugin updates.
No, this isn’t another post promoting my Options theme. It’s about theme options pages. Anybody that’s used one of my themes knows about the all-important theme options page, or, as I like to call it, the theme settings page.