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You are here: Home / Archives for Wordpress

WordPress, Anti-WebSpam, and the Akismet Plugin

June 24, 2012 By Jason Palmer 1 Comment

Comment Cloud One of the great things about WordPress is the ability to get immediate feedback.  Readers can leave comments on individual entries, and through Trackback or Pingback can comment on their own sites as well.

Imagine how excited I was to see that within hours of my first official WordPress post on my newly launched site, I had a comment.  In fact, on a fairly consistent basis, within hours of most of my posts, I had received comments.  Wow!  Is this Internet thing great or what?  What is it they say, “If you publish it, they will come?”

Turing TestAnd come they did, but “they” were BOTS (Computer Programs acting like people) and not actual people.  This weekend Google honored what would have been the 100th Birthday of the famed British mathematician, Alan Turing (born June 23rd, 1912).  (See the Google Doodle here.) His invention of the “Turing Test”, which is designed to test if a human can tell if the responses received from a series of asked questions are from another human or if they are programmed responses from a computer, was the inspiration for today’s article.  The true purpose of this test described in a 1950 paper was to answer the question, “Can Machines Think?” (Entitled, “Computing Machinery and Intelligence”, click here for background)

Bot or NotAt first glance, many of the comments received seemed perfectly legitimate.  Sentence structure and grammar were correct and contextually relevant.  On closer examination, even though the comments were complimentary in nature, they were also very generic and could have been written about any post.  Other clues that the comments were not sent by humans, but by machines, were that the sending email addresses were mostly made up of random characters and all from free email services.  The final clue was the link provided by the purported author of the comment. (When you make a comment on a WordPress Site, you enter your name, email address, and optionally, a link back to your own site.)  None of the links went to legitimate sites.  Some went to sites that offered fraudulent software license keys at extreme discounts, others were to doorway pages setup strictly to generate revenue from Google Adword impressions, and some went to discount offers for well know pharmaceutical sold through questionable channels.

WordPress has a number of features to make sure that only legitimate comments appear on your site. The first and most powerful is that all comments can be moderated by the Administrator.  On the WordPress Dashboard, a little message cloud appears showing the number of comments awaiting approval by the Administrator.  If you have a low traffic site, moderating the comments manually and without the assistance of a WordPress Anti-WebSpam Plugin may be sufficient.

AkismetHowever, if you would a little help from technology inspired by Alan Turing, you can let a “machine” determine if the comment is from a human or another machine.  This is where the Akismet Anti-WebSpam plugin can help.  Akismet provides a monthly subscription service for commercial sites (free for personal sites) that applies hundreds of tests to each comment and returns an up or down answer to the question:  Is this comment WebSpam?  The result of the Akismet tests properly tag the comment and place it in the correct Comment Queue for your further review giving you a head start on your comment moderation tasks.

The Akismet Plugin is installed by default with every installation of WordPress.  However, you must visit Akismet.com to register for a subscription, free or paid, to get an activation key so that all of the comments to your site are submitted to the Akismet engines for review.

Learn more about Akismet
– http://www.akismet.com

Learn more about Alan Turing
– http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing
– http://www.alanturing.net/

Learn about the Turing Test
– http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_test

Filed Under: Consulting, Tech in Plain English, Wordpress Tagged With: akismet, alan turing, computing machinery and intelligence, filters, google, leave comments, pingback, plugin, spam in blogs, spamming, the turing test, trackback, turing, turing test, visitors comments, webspam, wordpress, wordpress posts

Building JasonPalmer.com in WordPress

June 23, 2012 By Jason Palmer Leave a Comment

Dot Com Under ConstructionSo how is JasonPalmer.com built?  Even though I have the technical skill to build and design a web site from scratch, I wanted to focus on creating the content, not the technology.  I wanted a site that had a professional “look and feel” and that I could add features to without requiring any custom programming.  And, most importantly, it had to be an extensible platform that I could put up in minutes and hours, not days and weeks.  The answer was WordPress.

WordPress LogoInstalling the WordPress platform took less than ten minutes.  For many web hosting packages, adding in a WordPress site is a “one-click” install, and then just a few minutes to answer some basic configuration questions like: Web Site Name, Time Zone, and Preferred Date Format – along with setting up the Admin user and password.

Genesis Theme Framework LogoNext, I decided to purchase the Genesis WordPress Design Framework and Theme Pro Plus Pack from StudioPress.com and selected the “News Child Theme.”  The advantage of this commercial package is that it is already Search Engine Optimized, offers a Turn-Key Design with dozens of built-in Widgets (similar to WordPress Plug-In’s) that extend the functionality of the design (think fancy menu bar options), and it is unlimited use, which means I can use it on any site I create.  (Individual Themes can be purchased as well and are very competitively priced.)

Within approximately four hours I was able to build JasonPalmer.com in its’ entirety with all of the static content (everything you see in the top menu bar) and begin to post my first dynamic content article (blog and categories sections.)

Anyone can easily put a web site up at Bitnami Web Hosting and Amazon Web Services for Free (for the first year.)  See how you can do that too by reading my post on the subject here.

Technical Disclosure Note:  Although I am an expert in the installation of WordPress and Web Hosting, you do not need anywhere near my capability level to experience a similar outcome of being able to install and configure WordPress with a Theme of your choice and be “up and running” within one day with your new web site.

Official WordPress Site:
– http://www.WordPress.org

Genesis Theme Framework from Studio Press
– http://www.StudioPress.com

 

Filed Under: Consulting, Tech in Plain English, Wordpress Tagged With: blog software, building jasonpalmer.com, content management systems, framework, genesis, rapid deployment, studio press, themes, web hosting, wordpress, wordpress design, wordpress platform

WordPress Content Management System Platform

June 22, 2012 By Jason Palmer Leave a Comment

WordPress LogoThe biggest misconception about the creation of a web site is that professional expertise is an absolute requirement to produce a commercial quality experience for the visitor.  To put that myth to rest, “There’s an App for that” and it is called The WordPress Content Management System Platform.  WordPress is web software that provides a complete off-the-shelf, ready to go site that one can easily manage completely through any web browser such as Internet Explorer, FireFox, or Chrome.

WordPress is billed as being a personal publishing system, which enables users to create, post, and manage content – things that you write about, details about yourself or your company, product information, photographs – in short – any kind of content you see on any other web site can usually be managed in a WordPress site without “professional” help.

It is called a Platform because it provides a framework to which one can choose from thousands of little pieces of code called “Plug-Ins” to extend out the feature set. Plug-In’s are created by army of independent software developers in the WordPress Community.

Web Designers can create ready to install “Themes” which allow users to seamlessly change the look and feel of a website using templates without altering any of the content of the site as easily as one changes their shirt at the click of a button. (Click here to see a number of Free Themes available.)

Examples of Plug-In’s include Search Engine Optimization tools, Site Backup, Event Calendars, Weather Reports, Picture Gallery’s, Ratings and Surveys and much more.  (Check out the WordPress Plug-in Listings here.)   Many users will only need just a few Plug-in’s and WordPress includes some popular one’s by default.  However, there are thousands to choose from to do things that previously required the expertise of a programmer to create custom code.

Since WordPress is one of the most popular Content Management Systems, many Web Hosting companies offer it by default as part of their packages.   In fact, there are a number of companies that are dedicated to hosting WordPress sites exclusively.  Price is no longer a barrier as WordPress hosting is available for less than $5 a month for small sites.

Learn about WordPress
– http://www.wordpress.org

WordPress Plug-in Listing
– http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins

WordPress Free Theme Listing
– http://wordpress.org/extend/themes

Filed Under: Consulting, Tech in Plain English, Wordpress Tagged With: blog software, content management system, manage content, managed web content, web content, wordpress

Bitnami Web Hosting and Amazon Web Services for Free

June 9, 2012 By Jason Palmer Leave a Comment

Bitnami LogoBitnami Cloud Hosting is offering a free developer account which will allow you to manage and host one free Amazon EC2 micro server instance for a full year at no charge.  Included are the free usage tiers for Amazon S3, Amazon Elastic Block Store, Amazon Elastic Load Balancing, and Amazon Web Services data transfer.

Amazon Web Services Solution Provider Cloud LogoTranslation:    The Bitnami Cloud Hosting Management Portal coupled with Amazon EC2 Services enables  fast and easy one click creation over 20 ready-to-run applications which include the most popular content management systems like WordPress, Joomla, and Drupal; customer relationship management systems including SugarCRM  and the wiki environments DokuWiki and MediaWiki.  For a list of presently supported Apps available for deployment through the Bitnami Cloud Management Portal, click here.

Bitnami Application LibraryNeed to run more than one Application?  No problem.   Bitnami Cloud Hosting makes it easy to install multiple applications on the same Amazon EC2 Server instance.

Some major advantages of using the Bitnami Cloud Hosting Management Portall to manage Amazon EC2 are the Automated Backups as well as the One-Click Server Restore capabilities.   Backup scheduling can be set to weekly, daily, or even hourly and it uses an incremental model to save on storage costs.  Only changed data is added at each scheduled backup.  Restoring a corrupted or damaged server to the time of the last backup takes only minutes.

Bitnami Estimated Cloud Computing CostsAlthough not an issue during use of the first year free period, Bitnami supports Server Scheduling to shut down and start up the Server instances that may not be in use after business hours thereby saving money by only running applications when needed.   Bitnami and Amazon hope that the free first year trial users will upgrade to higher level paid accounts and to that end, Bitnami offers an excellent tool for estimating Cloud computing costs on Amazon both on a per hour and per month basis.

Bitnami Server TemplateBitnami supports the ability to make “Templates” of specific configurations and customizations of Servers.  This enables a quick spin-up of a copy of an existing server for new projects without having to start from scratch each time.

Bitnami Cloud Hosting is independent of the Amazon Web Services account so if the Bitnami Managment Control Panel service is canceled, all existing Amazon Servers and Backups remain.

To learn more about Bitnami Cloud Hosting Services, click here.

To learn how to sign up for an Amazon Web Services Account to work with Bitnami Cloud Hosting, click here.

 

 

Filed Under: Cloud, Wordpress Tagged With: amazon ec2, amazon elastic compute cloud, amazon s3, amazon web services, amazon web services free tier web hosting services, bitnami, bitnami cloud hosting, cloud computing, cloud infrastructure, cloud storage, file hosting, hosting management, hosting service, web hosting, web hosting service, web services

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