When I spend more than a few minutes thinking about and writing something on a social media platform I don’t own, I want to take that out of the hands of datamongers and put it on my own platform.
I’ve built dozens of websites with millions of monthly visitors. My web development portfolio is mostly on GitHub (or right here if you view source).
When I spend more than a few minutes thinking about and writing something on a social media platform I don’t own, I want to take that out of the hands of datamongers and put it on my own platform.
Every website should encourage their customers to keep good habits.
Every year I build a new site for the Message Systems User Conference, and this year we decided to build it into our custom drupal framework.
My new WordPress theme is responsive, more efficient, and better communicates the dual personalities of my content.
While coding responsive email templates with our new design, I’ve come to dread looking at how my code renders in certain behind-the-curve email clients.
This post is a WordPress Style Guide for v3.9. I use these privately to work on my Themes, but I thought others might want to use it too.