In Feburary 2016 28,
Upload your podcast file to your Web server using an FTP client. This is necessary because on most blogs, you cannot upload large files through the dashboard. Put the podcast file in the main directory on your WordPress site; do not upload it to any of the sub-directories.
Log in to the WordPress dashboard from the 'wp-admin' directory of your website. Navigate to 'Posts' and click 'Add New.' Fill out the form with a title and description of the podcast.
Click the 'HTML' tab on the WordPress editor box. Copy and paste the following code into your post in the section where you want the audio player to appear:
This code is for the free Google Reader MP3 player. It will work on any Web page as long as your visitors' browsers are Flash-enabled. Most players require Flash, so this is a standard requirement.
Change 'MP3_FILE_URL' in the example code above to point to the URL of your podcast file. Additionally, change the 'width' value to adjust the width of the player, if you wish. You can change the height, too, but it looks best at the default setting of '27.'
Publish the post to your WordPress blog. The podcast will be embedded in your post.
In Feburary 2016 28,
Showing posts with label wp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wp. Show all posts
Sunday, 28 February 2016
Saturday, 27 February 2016
How to Add a WordPress Blog to Your Zen Cart StoreIn Feburary 2016 27,
In Feburary 2016 27,
Right-click inside your hosting folder and select “New Folder.”
Name the folder “Blog.”
Download and unzip WordPress to your computer.
Log in to the cPanel of your Web-hosting account and create a new database for your WordPress installation.
Open the WordPress folder on your computer.
Rename the 'wp-config-sample.php' file to 'wp-config.php.'
Open the 'wp-config.php' file using Notepad.
Type your database name and database username and password from Step 5. Save the file.
Copy the WordPress files located on your computer to the Blog folder on your Web server.
Log in to your Zen Cart Admin Dashboard at mydomain.com/zencart/admin. Replace “mydomain.com” with the URL of your website.
Click “Tools” and “EZ Pages.” Click the “New File” button.
Type “yoursite.com/blog,” replacing “yoursite.com” with the URL of your site in the “Link URL” box.
Click “Insert.”
In Feburary 2016 27,
Right-click inside your hosting folder and select “New Folder.”
Name the folder “Blog.”
Download and unzip WordPress to your computer.
Log in to the cPanel of your Web-hosting account and create a new database for your WordPress installation.
Open the WordPress folder on your computer.
Rename the 'wp-config-sample.php' file to 'wp-config.php.'
Open the 'wp-config.php' file using Notepad.
Type your database name and database username and password from Step 5. Save the file.
Copy the WordPress files located on your computer to the Blog folder on your Web server.
Log in to your Zen Cart Admin Dashboard at mydomain.com/zencart/admin. Replace “mydomain.com” with the URL of your website.
Click “Tools” and “EZ Pages.” Click the “New File” button.
Type “yoursite.com/blog,” replacing “yoursite.com” with the URL of your site in the “Link URL” box.
Click “Insert.”
In Feburary 2016 27,
Sunday, 14 February 2016
How to Find a WordPress Page on My ServerIn Feburary 2016 14,
In Feburary 2016 14,
Open your server explorer or FTP program so you can see a view of the entries on your server. This requires an active FTP account with your server company, with a correct log-in name and password. You need to be able to see all of the files currently hosted on your server.
Look for WordPress files in the root directory for your domain. If you are hosting a WordPress site, your WordPress package will be installed on your server in the root directory for that site. For example, if your website is called MyBlog.com, look for WordPress files under the directory for 'MyBlog.' Most of the WordPress files within that directory will be identifiable because they are named with the preface 'wp-' such as 'wp-content,' 'wp-admin,' or 'wp-includes.'
Search for WordPress files in other subfolders. If you are hosting a WordPress page, but within a non-WordPress website, look for these 'wp-' files in other sub-folders on the server. They are usually found in a trio, 'wp-content,' 'wp-admin,' and 'wp-includes,' plus approximately 30 files that make up the root of WordPress. For example, if you have a special blogger's page within your MySite.com website, look under the server directory for 'MySite/blogpagename' for WordPress files.
Conduct a search for PHP (Hypertext Preprocessor) files, as many WordPress files are PHP files. Open your FTP program's search box and type in '*.PHP' and the search function will locate all PHP files on your server. Note where these PHP files are located, especially in large numbers. You can usually back track and find the remaining WordPress files associated with these PHP files by following these clues.
Run a search on a specific file you remember creating for your WordPress site, such as a unique name for a graphics or picture file. If you can recall uploading a photograph named 'angrycat.jpg,' for example, search for that term, 'angrycat.' Invariably, the picture file will be nestled inside a WordPress image file, which may in turn be found within the Wp-Content folder, and so forth.
Reinstall WordPress. If all else fails and you can neither find a missing WordPress file, nor get your WordPress site to function correctly, reload a fresh copy of WordPress to the proper directory on your server. You can simply discard any duplicate files found by your FTP upload program so you do not need to delete any files currently in the directory folder. Your WordPress 'engine' will be properly installed in the correct location again.
In Feburary 2016 14,
Open your server explorer or FTP program so you can see a view of the entries on your server. This requires an active FTP account with your server company, with a correct log-in name and password. You need to be able to see all of the files currently hosted on your server.
Look for WordPress files in the root directory for your domain. If you are hosting a WordPress site, your WordPress package will be installed on your server in the root directory for that site. For example, if your website is called MyBlog.com, look for WordPress files under the directory for 'MyBlog.' Most of the WordPress files within that directory will be identifiable because they are named with the preface 'wp-' such as 'wp-content,' 'wp-admin,' or 'wp-includes.'
Search for WordPress files in other subfolders. If you are hosting a WordPress page, but within a non-WordPress website, look for these 'wp-' files in other sub-folders on the server. They are usually found in a trio, 'wp-content,' 'wp-admin,' and 'wp-includes,' plus approximately 30 files that make up the root of WordPress. For example, if you have a special blogger's page within your MySite.com website, look under the server directory for 'MySite/blogpagename' for WordPress files.
Conduct a search for PHP (Hypertext Preprocessor) files, as many WordPress files are PHP files. Open your FTP program's search box and type in '*.PHP' and the search function will locate all PHP files on your server. Note where these PHP files are located, especially in large numbers. You can usually back track and find the remaining WordPress files associated with these PHP files by following these clues.
Run a search on a specific file you remember creating for your WordPress site, such as a unique name for a graphics or picture file. If you can recall uploading a photograph named 'angrycat.jpg,' for example, search for that term, 'angrycat.' Invariably, the picture file will be nestled inside a WordPress image file, which may in turn be found within the Wp-Content folder, and so forth.
Reinstall WordPress. If all else fails and you can neither find a missing WordPress file, nor get your WordPress site to function correctly, reload a fresh copy of WordPress to the proper directory on your server. You can simply discard any duplicate files found by your FTP upload program so you do not need to delete any files currently in the directory folder. Your WordPress 'engine' will be properly installed in the correct location again.
In Feburary 2016 14,
Labels:
admin,
called,
content,
identifiable,
includes,
MyBlog,
page,
Search,
subfolders,
wp
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