Matt Mullenweg at WordCamp San Diego
on the 8 of August 2011
by Ansel Taft
in Web Design
The inaugural WordCamp San Diego was held July 16 and who should attend but Mr. WordPress himself, Matt Mullenweg. I was on the edge of my seat, like a fanboy at Comicon (okay, not that bad), listening to his responses during the townhall-style Q&A session at the end of the WordCamp. I have to say, Mr. Mullenweg projects a easy-going vibe that makes him seem approachable. Here’s my favorite photo from the session:
There was one funny quote from the Q&A I wanted to pass along:
You can’t meet the leader of the Free World with that hair.
Matt’s Mom on hearing her son was to meet President Obama
How To Choose A Hosting Provider (In 6 Easy Steps)
on the 5 of August 2011
by Ansel Taft
in Web Design
I read an article today of all the factors to consider when selecting a hosting provider. They asked readers to consider 19 dimensions when making their decision. Yikes! Who would weigh that many considerations, especially when hosting is relatively commoditized?
In response, I’ve put together my own easy six steps to use when selecting a host:
How to Select a Host (In 6 Easy Steps)
- Determine the type of hosting you can afford each month.
- $5-10 = Shared
- $10-35 = Reseller
- $35-$100 = VPS or Cloud VPS
- $100+ = Dedicated (or more VPS / Cloud VPS resources)
- Find the best specs (storage, bandwidth, etc) you can for the money. The higher the numbers, generally, the better. But don’t be fooled by ‘unlimited’ offers. If your site lands on Digg’s homepage, you can bet your ‘unlimited’ plan will evaporate instantly.
- Determine what features are most important to you. Do you need a control panel (likely, yes)? Do you want one-click application installs (*cough* WordPress *cough*)? Do you want a bunch of email addresses, forwarders, subdomains and databases (see above, and likely, yes)?
- Start with the host with the best specs (#2), features (#3) and priced most competitively (read: the best value). Google the name of the host and add ‘reviews’ behind your search. Read a bunch or reviews, using your best judgement to spot trends, holes in their support, or overwhelming negative reviews. Please keep in mind that most hosts have negative reviews and people are more likely to post about bad experiences, than good ones. If you don’t like what you read, move on to the next competitively-priced host. Rinse and repeat.
- *TIP* If you find one that you would like to take a chance on, try to find a coupon code, special offer, or free trial. Google the name of the company and add ‘coupon code’, ‘special offers’, or ‘free trial’ to the end of the search.
- Purchase your new hosting plan and wait for the automated emails to roll in. Read the next series of emails closely and follow the instructions.
That’s it!
If you want my recommendation, I determined that I wanted a cloud VPS server with root access (which meant that I could install just about anything on a dedicated [virtual] machine). I clicked every link and paid advertisement for five pages into Google. In the end, I determined that the best value was Enzu.com. Their Cloud-2GB plan had awesome specs for the money. While there were a couple hiccups in the beginning, they were smoothed out. My cloud VPS is stable, returning pages quickly, and I couldn’t be happier.
Good luck to you on finding your new dream host!
References: How to choose a Web Host Company?
WordPress is Missing an Obvious Revenue Stream
on the 13 of July 2011
by Ansel Taft
in Web Design
Talking with a friend the other day, a simple idea hit me like a lightning bolt:
WordPress (Automattic) has completely missed the boat on an obvious revenue stream. Why doesn’t WordPress.org have a ThemeForest/CodeCanyon-style marketplace? Apple has the App Store, Android has the Marketplace. Why doesn’t WordPress have the Last Word? The Word? The SolutionPress? (I’m spitballing here, but you get the idea).
What could be more trusted (and profitable) than buying the plug-in or theme straight from the guys who brought you the CMS you’re using?
Mr. Mullenweg, I’ll see you Saturday at San Diego’s first ever WordCamp San Diego. If we get a chance to talk, I’ll let you guess what I’m going to say!
Of Debt Ceiling Checks & Political Chicken
on the 12 of July 2011
by Ansel Taft
in Politics
I am hating Congressional Republicans more and more.
This debt ceiling nonsense is just that: nonsense.
Why?
The problem is man-made. (By having a Debt Ceiling check in the first place)
It is artificial. (Why can’t we just raise the ceiling again?)
Republicans have a long history of rubber stamping the debt ceiling increase. Same as the Dems. They chose this moment in time to make a stand. To save America for our grandchildren and their children, right?
But anyone can see this is not about the debt ceiling. It is about destabilizing the economy, prolonging the recovery, and in the process, destroying Obama’s reelection chances. This game of ideology chicken is the sickest ploy I have ever seen, because they could derail the whole country’s stability through payment defaults and interest rate increases.
Play it out in your head and you will see that the poor, seniors and everyone but the wealthiest Americans will be hurt the most (the richest will be harmed as well, but they have the resources to temper the fallout). When Obama categorized Republicans as hostage takers, he had it right. The GOP is holding the entire country’s well being in their hands. Which is unfortunately tied to their small minds.
But here’s the most egregious offense: any economist, even one who grabbed his degree from a ‘party school’ can tell you that we need government spending to get us out of this recession. You may be aware that government spending ripples through the economy 10 times, in decreasing magnitudes. The morons on the Right would have you believe that government contraction will save us.
They’re lying to you and they know it.
If they really were the party of business, they would keep government spending firing on all cylinders and contract it after we recover. So it’s as plain as the frown on my face what they’re up to. Destabilize the economy. Prolong the recovery. Defeat Obama. Hurt everyone but their true constituents (the top 1%), who will be the only sector who can afford campaign contributions at that point.
You a**holes are sinking America, in the most unamerican, treasonous manner I can fathom. Congratulations.
HTML Email Boilerplate
on the 17 of June 2011
by Ansel Taft
in Web Design
As someone who has developed and sent HTML emails, I can tell you that this site, if kept up to date, will be a huge time saver:
Awesomeness!
Custom Layouts for WordPress Themes
on the 17 of June 2011
by Ansel Taft
in Web Design
Have you ever wanted a homepage that looked different than your blog page? Or have you ever installed a theme that had different page templates for the homepage, gallery pages, contact form and blog post? I sure have. For months I wondered how I could do it for my own themes.
Well, the answer turns out to be surprisingly simple. It’s literally four lines of code:
<?php /* Template Name: Snarfer */ ?>
You can read more about it here: http://codex.wordpress.org/Pages#Creating_Your_Own_Page_Templates
Here’s how I used this knowledge: while putting together a new site for a local san diego salon, I took the default layout file (page.php) and copied it with a new name (homepage.php). Then I added the lines of code above, except I changed the template name to ‘Homepage’. WhaBAM! A new template type to chose from when adding a new page. In the case of SuedeSalonSD.com, I only used the new template type once, for the homepage.
But as you can image, the possibilities are virtually endless!
Enjoy!
SuperYachtsInc.com
An HTML to WordPress conversion
on May 9, 2011, 5:23 pm
by Ansel Taft
in Portfolio1
SuperYachtsInc.com
Background: Super Yachts Inc is the leader in mega yachts buying, selling, construction and conversion. SuperYachtsInc.com was an HTML to WordPress site conversion. To bring the design up a notch, I added a full width, seamlessly repeating ocean image and floated the super yacht and logo on the background. The site now displays well on any screen with a horizontal resolution of 1,024 pixel or above. The mechanics of the site were also improved using some off-the-shelf plug-ins from my collection.
Challenges: Converting the static HTML site into WordPress. This has become my specialty.
Status: Promising growth; traffic has more than doubled since the beginning of the SEO campaign.
AmphibiaCam.com
Experimental site made in ModX CMS
on March 8, 2011, 11:27 am
by Ansel Taft
in Portfolio3
AmphibiaCam.com
Background: AmphibiaCam.com was an experimental site to showcase a real-time webcam feed from a frog tank in our living room. It all started when my wife, an elementary school teacher, received two African dwarf frogs from a student during Teacher Appreciation Week. One day, while watching the active juvenile frogs, I thought, “we should broadcast this!” A couple hundred dollars later (stupid, stupid) I figured out how to send 5 frames per second of 800×600 pixel video to Justin.TV to then embed the feed in AmphibiaCam.com. If you would like the technological secret sauce, send me an email and I’ll let you know how to do it.
Challenges: Learning ModX, Researching / Implementing the hardware / software needed to stream real-time video to the ‘net.
Status: Deactivated
CallOnClick.com
Hosted click to call solution built in PHP using the smarty framework
on March 8, 2011, 11:19 am
by Ansel Taft
in Portfolio2
CallOnClick.com
Background: CallOnClick.com is the leading hosted click to call solution. It was developed in 2007 using PHP and the smarty framework. I personally manage CallOnClick as a one-man team. As such, I have learned many lessons in business, e-commerce, and automation.
Challenges: Running a custom PHP site, while knowing little about PHP and the smarty framework. Currently seeking an individual or firm to convert the site to a WordPress web application framework.
Status: Thriving.
The World’s Most Useless ‘Pocket’ Knife
...Or maybe the *most* useful??
on the 18 of February 2010
by anseltaft
in Pop Culture
As I leafed through the latest Hammacher Schlemmer catalog this afternoon, I came across this little gem. I have to say, the photo piqued my curiosity. At first, I thought it could be the most man-tastic pocket knife ever. That was, until I noticed that it’s 8.75″ long!
Well paint me dumbfounded. Would you really set a screw with this thing’s Phillips head screwdriver, rotating a mini steering wheel-sized hunk of metal? Really Wenger, really? Did the world need this bit of utter ridiculousness?
And for those of you chomping at the bit to get one, it can be yours for the reasonable price tag of $1,400 USD.
Here’s the complete tool list:


