Beautiful WordPress Themes

Do you know Collis Ta’eed and his various websites?  Here are some of them:

He has a new site in private beta called ThemeForest.  The site provides WordPress themes as well as other website templates for popular Content Management Systems (CMS), like Drupal, Joomla and others.  There are some pretty darn cool themes there and they are pretty darn inexpensive too.  Here is a screen shot of the popular gallery.

Go to Freelance Folder and take a Sneak Peak at ThemeForest.  When I received a login I had to login to the Flash Den site first and then use the “envato network” menu on the top right side of the page to navigate to ThemeForest.

Also, at another site called Woork by Antonio Lupetti, Antonio has an article Daily inspiration: 10 Websites to get design inspiration. Although all 10 of the sites are inspirational two really stuck out for me.

1. http://www.cabedge.com/

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2. http://blog.karimzurita.com/

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WordPress 2.7 - Hemorrhage

I have a confession - I love WordPress.  It’s just so cool.  Anyway, I stay up with the changes by downloading them at http://svn.automattic.com/wordpress/trunk/.

I don’t actually browse there and download the files with a web browser but I use Subversion which is a code control system for developers who are - developing systems and need a way to keep track of program code changes.  Think of the tracking changes feature in Microsoft Word.  Kind of like that but not exactly the same.

You can read about how I setup the newest WordPress stuff on my PC to test in my article Running and Reviewing WordPress 2.5-beta1.  Although that article might be WordPress 2.5 beta 1 specific you can pretty much do the same for any version of WordPress.  I set up a folder called WordPress27 as well as a database called WordPress27.

After I install Subversion, I download and install TortoiseSVN, a Subversion client for Windows.

What TortoiseSVN does is allow you to right-click on a folder where you want to download the latest code for WordPress by selecting the menu choice “SVN Update” after you’ve configured TortoiseSVN to look at http://svn.automattic.com/wordpress/trunk/.  TortoiseSVN will go out and download the changes from the last time you downloaded.

On to WordPress 2.7 - Hemorrhage.  After updating the latest version below is a screen shot of what the dashboard looks like.  They’ve changed things up for the better in my opinion by using a sidebar menu structure to navigate WordPress 2.7

First, here’s the screen shot of the version at the bottom of the Dashboard in WordPress 2.7.  That’s how I got the title of this blog post.  Kind of funny.  I didn’t even know they called it that until I scrolled to the bottom and saw it.

The dashboard:

If you’re a WordPress user you’ll notice the sidebar menu as oppossed to the horizontal menu currently in WordPress.  However, this is way, way early WordPress 2.7 and things might change drastically before it is final.  So hold on, come back here to check out more new features and screen shots of WordPress 2.7.  If you’d rather receive updates by email subscribe to my email updates.

This is a Must-Download Report

You may remember back in July I sent you to a video by Yaro Starak called “Conversion Blogging”, which outlined Yaro’s system of blogging and marketing with an email list to bring in over $100,000 per year.

Conversion Blogging Video

That video was a huge hit and many people who watched it went on to join Yaro’s coaching program.

However some people don’t like video or have such slow Internet that video doesn’t work. To help these people, Yaro has released a text transcript of the video, so you can read his advice.

The report is ready to go. It’s 15 pages long in PDF format and just like the video, it won’t cost you a cent.

You can get it on this page (look for the text link under the video) - Conversion Blogging Video

If you are thinking of doing anything business related with a blog or you just want to know how you can make a solid income by following Yaro’s proven system, you need to go read this report.  This is information you won’t find anywhere else.

Here’s to your successful blog,

Bill

PS. I’ve been keeping my eye on the Aussie dollar and lately it’s dropped about 5 cents against the US. That means the price for Yaro’s coaching program is now 10% off if you are used to paying in US dollars because Yaro is still charging in Australian dollars.

That’s a good discount and it’s worth taking advantage of sooner rather than later. You can do so here - Blog Mastermind Coaching.

Google Reader and Google Alerts

Google Reader – Staying Up To Date

Want to stay up to date on something that is news-worthy andoly important to you?  Did you know you can use Google Reader to stay up on particular topics and not just blogs?  All you need to do is look for that RSS icon or something similar to it that provides an RSS feed to that information you’re interested in.

So for example, fire up Firefox 3 or your favorite browser – Internet Explorer 7, Flock, Opera, etc.  You just need to make sure you can get that RSS feed icon in the address bar.  Install the Google Toolbar as well.  This will allow you to see the RSS icon in your address bar.

In Google, search on a topic you want to track.  Let’s use Olympics for this example.  I’ll search on Olympics and after I get the results page I’ll click on the News link.  Now, you should see the RSS icon in the address bar.

google-news-link

After clicking on News link.

google-rss-address-bar

If you don’t see an RSS icon anywhere on the page, try to copy and paste the URL into a new RSS subscription box in Google Reader and see if it finds a feed.

Now, every time there’s news about anything with Olympics in it, you’re Google Reader will be the first one to find out.  Which means you’ll also see the information before anyone else.  Okay, I’m stretching it a bit.  By the way, you can also do this with the Blogs link.

Google Alerts – Staying Up To Date

Don’t want to use Google Reader for up-to-date news?  How about using Google Alerts to receive up-to-date news in your inbox?  After you’ve searched on “Olympics” and clicking on the News link, look at the bottom of the first search results page.  You should see something like this.

google-alerts

Now if you click on this link you’ll add it to your Google Alerts and you’ll receive an email when news breaks about the Olympics.

I don’t use Google Alerts a whole lot because I don’t want too much more email in my inbox.  It’s crowded all ready.  But it is a cool service for a few important things I want to keep up on since email is one of the first things I check everyday.

25 Terrific Tweets

Here are 25 Terrific Tweets during the past week from the folks I follow on Twitter.  There’s gold in them there tweets!!   :)

1. – The 30 Day Challenge continues and I have to list it again amongst the terrific tweets because there’s so much great information available, from looking for a niche for a blog topic to doing market research in that niche to creating a blog to populating that blog with content and creating links to that blog as well as reviewing the statistics of the blog’s traffic.

If you’re a noob to advanced web publisher, there’s something for everyone.  It might take a bit of time and you might fall behind like I have, but nevertheless – great info.  Oh yea, for FREE!!   :) Thanks Ed Dale and gang!!

2. – Tell-a-Friend - Kind of like addThis to promote your pages on your blog or websites.

3. – Another tool for the web designer – jQuery Grid – awesome examples page and code included to provide a grid feature on your blog or website.

4. – Yahoo launched fire eagle

“Fire Eagle is a service that helps users share their location online with their friends and with other sites and services.”  Find out more…

5. – Building with WordPress: From sketch to prototype to company website in 5 hours by Max

6. – A Quick Tutorial on JavaScript Bookmarklets by Matt Cutts

7. – twitterfeed – Automatically post the feed of the Alltop news blog to your Twitter account appearing as a tweet from you.  Also, new at Alltop – Tech News, Open Source, Content Management.

8. – Where can I see my friends’ listening activity on Pandora? by Get Satisfaction

9. – Test your web site to see if it’s ready for mobile customers! by dotMobi

10. – Exporting Everything Out of Google Docs by The Paisano.  Talking about Greasemonkey scripts.  Go here to download Greasemonkey.

“Greasemonkey is a Firefox extension that allows you to customize the way webpages look and function.

Hundreds of scripts are already available for free. And if you’re the tinkerer sort, you can also write your own.“

Here’s another script that allows you to follow a bunch of folks on twitter easily - Twitter Smarter with Greasemonkey by Promote My Site.  Pretty freaky.

11. – Design for Emotion and Flow by boxesandarrows

12. – Interview With Peter Kent, Author of Search Engine Optimization For Dummies by Wordtracker

13. – StumbleUpon removes the 200 friends limit.  Woo Hoo!!  Talking about StumbleUpon, don’t forget about Caroline Middlebrook’s StumbleRush course.  I’m also in the middle of that as well.

14. – Twitter’s 2000-Follow Limit Raises A Ruckus. But How Many People Can You Seriously Watch Anyway? by TechCrunch

15. – Kaltura Launches WordPress Plugin for Interactive Video by Mashable

16. – drag and drop.io by drop.io – Pretty darn cool.

17. – Writing Code in Your Posts by Codex

18. – 25+ Tools For Accounting and Budgeting by Mashable – Maybe you won’t use any of these but from a design/functionality perspective you might learn or get some good design ideas.

19. – Create your own home page with Alefo

20. – Entertaining - flickrvision

21. – FaceYourManga.com

22. – 30+ Great Web Tools You Might not Know Yet but Should by SEOptimise

23. – Backup your twitter followers, friends, favorites, and your own tweets with Tweetake

24. – Talk amongst yourselves – Utterz – Mobile Multimedia Discussions

25. – 17 Websites to Boost Your Designer Profile by FreelanceSwitch

photo credit: foshie

Google Reader: An Introduction

I use Google Reader as my RSS Reader to read blogs.  I’ve used it for quite some time now and was recently talking to some folks who had no idea it existed or how to use it.  These people read blogs by browsing to each one everyday to check out if there’s anything new to read. I introduced them to Google Reader and told them how they could read through their blogs a bit quicker using Google Reader.

1. Subscribe To The RSS Feed

Google Reader allows you to subscribe to various blogs that you like to read.  If you visit a blog like this one, there might be an icon like the one I have in the upper right-hand corner of this blog or some link text that says something like Subscribe to my RSS Feed or some form of RSS subscription action.

Here’s mine:

After you click on the RSS feed icon, you’ll be presented with a page that allows you to pick your RSS reader.  For the purpose of this article you would pick Google Reader.

If you don’t see an RSS feed icon at a blog or website that you’re interested in subscribing to, copy the home page URL - www.xyzcompany.com and click Add subscription in Google Reader.  Paste the URL into the Add suscription box.  If there is an RSS feed available for that blog or website then Google Reader will discover it.

2. Categorize Your Subscriptions

While you start adding RSS feeds into Google Reader your list of blogs will grow.  If that list gets too big and you feel like it’s a bit unmanageable you might want to categorize them.  I would start categorizing feeds right away from the very beginning when you start using Google Reader.  You never know how fast your list will grow.

When you subscribe to a blog, that blog will end up at the bottom of the list on the left-side in Google Reader.  The new blog should be the current one in your reader and displaying articles on the right-hand side reader pane.

To catorgorize this blog, click on the Feed settings… button on the top right-side of the page.

Select your category or click on New folder… at the bottom of the drop-down list.  Your category will show up in the list on the left-side of Google Reader.

As you can see at the bottom of the list you can select Manage subscriptions and you’ll be taken to a page where you can manage various aspects of the blogs you’re subscribed to.

3. Reading Blogs in Google Reader

Now that you have your list of blogs and you have them all categorized, it’s time to start ripping through the blog posts you might like to read.  I say “ripping” and “might like to read” because what we’ll actually be doing is quickly skimming through the blog posts to see what’s interesting by reading the title of the post and/or skimming the content of the post.

You can start from the top.  On the left side of Google Reader you’ll see All Items.  Click on All Items or any of the categorized folders you created earlier and the reading pane will fill up with blog posts.

Now you’re ready to read the blog posts or skim through the titles and contents of the posts to see if there is anything that interests you.  You can press the Previous item and Next item buttons to read through your blog posts.  As you use the Next item button the highlighted post that you’re reading will be marked as read.

For even a quicker view of all those blog posts switch to List view which is in the upper right-hand corner of the reading pane and use your scroll bar to scan the blog post titles.  Scanning like this will not mark the blog posts as read.  So when you finish ripping through all those blog post with the scroll bar, you might need to click on the mark all as read button located at the top-middle of the reading pane.

As you read the blog posts, the count of unread blog posts will go to zero assuming you read through everything or mark all as read.  So the next time you use your Google Reader, you just have to look for the unread posts which makes it a quick way to read through or skim your favorite blogs.

Also, at the bottom of each blog post is an action bar that contains some actions as well.  I won’t go into these now as this article is focusing on an introduction to Google Reader.  You can certainly read more about these actions in the Google Reader Help Center or just start using and playing with them.  Here is a screen shot of those actions.

What’s Left?

I did not cover everything about Google Reader and here’s a list of extra stuff you can check out while using Google Reader.

  • You can manage your categories.
  • You can share your feeds with other peoples.  Check out this recent blog post by Google.
  • You can email a post to someone.
  • Experiment with using List view and Expanded view - List view is an even quicker way to zoom through your blog posts to see if there’s anything interesting that sticks out than the others.
  • Starred items
  • Tags - Allows you to tag a blog post for example you like as “favorites” without tagging the whole blog itself.
  • Trends
  • Notes
  • Auto-Discovery
  • and much more you can read about at the Google Reader Help Center.

There’s a lot to Google Reader as well as a lot you can do with it than just read blogs.  I’ll be showing you other tricks you can do with Google Reader in future articles.  Make sure you subscribe so you don’t miss a trick.