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Adobe Dreamweaver CS5 – Enjoy Authoring and Testing Support for WordPress, Joomla! and Drupal

Saturday, October 9, 2010

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A great part of innovations included in Adobe CS5 is designed to make workflows of creative professionals smoother and more productive. One of such features intended to facilitate Web development is integrated support for content management systems such as WordPress, Joomla!, and Drupal in Adobe Dreamweaver CS5. Emergence of WordPress, Joomla!, Drupal and other content management [...]

Academica: Free WordPress 3.0+ Theme For Educational Websites

Sunday, August 29, 2010

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  In this post we release a yet another freebie: Academica WordPress Theme, a free WordPress theme designed specifically for educational websites such as universities, schools etc. It's a flexible and versatile free theme that can be easily customized and branded for any university, academy or non-profit organization. The theme is designed by ProudThemes (the server is currently not working) and released for Smashing Magazine and its readers. As usual, the theme is free to use in private and commerical projects. The theme was developed for WordPress 3.0+, allows enabling/disabling of a jQuery-based content slider on the homepage for showing your photos, has 9 sidebar widget areas and 3 custom widgets, 3 custom page templates and 2 custom post templates and provides dynamic image resizing (TimThumb script). The theme is released under GPL. You can use it for all your projects for free and without any restrictions. Please link to this article if you want to spread the word. You may modify the theme as you wish.

10 Useful WordPress Security Tweaks

Thursday, July 1, 2010

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  Security has always been a hot topic. Offline, people buy wired homes, car alarms and gadgets to bring their security to the max. Online, security is important, too, especially for people who make a living from websites and blogs. In this article, we'll show you some useful tweaks to protect your WordPress-powered blog.When you fail to log into a WordPress blog, the CMS displays some info telling you what went wrong. This is good if you've forgotten your password, but it might also be good for people who want to hack your blog. So, why not prevent WordPress from displaying error messages on failed log-ins?

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