Showing posts with label standard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label standard. Show all posts

Monday, August 31, 2015

How to upload a theme to Wordpress


How to change Wordpress theme, if you have a free account at Wordpress.com you just have to login to your Wordpress blog and select Appearance and then click on the Themes link. This will bring up the standard Worpdress themes available. Click on the theme you like and select Activate. Then this will become your new Wordpress theme.
If you have your own domain name and host then you will need to go to your ftp client or login to an ftp client like the one that Godaddy provides and upload a new theme. Download a theme first and once you've done that save it to a folder you can easily find. Then once inside the ftp client upload the new theme folder to:
yourblogname.com/wp-content/themes
Then login to your blog admin area youblogname.com/wp-admin and then click on Appearance and then Themes. Just as Wordpress.com you will see a preview of the theme once you click on it. You must click 'Activate the theme name' to make that your new Wordpress theme. To setup a new Wordpress blog application on Godaddy check out my other how to called how to start a Wordpress blog.
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How to Make a Badge for a Blog (6 Steps)


Go to a free online badge generator where you can pick out the text, size and colors of your badge.
Open a graphic editing program such as Adobe Photoshop. If you don't already have a good graphic editing program, you can download a free trial of Photoshop or a free, open source program such as Paint.NET.
Create a new file in your program that is 125 pixels wide by 125 pixels high. This is the standard size of a blog badge. Do this by choosing the size when you create the new document.
Open the file that holds the logo for your blog, or create one if you don't have it. Right click and 'Copy' the image from your site, or simply type the name of your blog on the new file that you created. Find a freeware image or clip art to add to your badge. Make sure that however you decorate it, it represents the look and theme of your blog.
Save the badge to your computer when you are satisfied with it. Make sure you save it with a file extension of .jpg, .png or .gif. These extensions are the ones that are used the most often for badges. Go to a free image-hosting site and upload your badge. When you upload it, the badge will have a URL so you can put it on the sidebar of your blog for people to use. If you have a domain that is hosted on your own server, you can upload the badge with an FTP program or from the online file directory in your host's control panel.
Put the badge on your side bar with a line of HTML code. If you uploaded your badge to a free image-hosting website, it will most likely give you the code you need for your badge to show up. If you uploaded to your own server, use this code to place your badge on the sidebar of your blog (replacing 'yourdomain' and 'yourbadge' with the correct names):
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Sunday, August 30, 2015

How to Create a Free Website Get Paid (6 Steps)


Choose a free website host. Often your Internet provider may offer this service, or you can find another free web hosting service (see Resources). Make sure your host offers enough storage space to create a fairly decent web page. A website with 100 mb of storage space isn't going to give you much room to work. Get familiar with the publishing tools your prospective website host offers. These are the tools you will use to design and create your website. You want tools that offer you flexibility in the layout and design of your website, as well as tools that make uploading the files for your website simple. Most free web hosts offer these tools as standard features.
Decide on the content of your website. The ability you have to attract advertisers to your website will be based on your ability to attract huge numbers of visitors to your website. Think of topics that will interest the widest possible audience. You're not making a website for your entertainment; you're making a website that will generate revenue. Self-help websites in areas such as 'how to gain financial freedom' or 'how to make money doing (insert subject)' are popular. Websites that offer just about anything free are also big crowd-pleasers. Pick a topic, or several topics, that will bring traffic to your website.
Sell advertising space. Once you have a proven track record of a large number of visitors to your website on a daily basis, use your website to advertise space on your website. Track the number of visitors to your website with a free tracker, something most free web hosts provide.
Advertise your website wherever you can to increase traffic. Include a link to your website in every email you send out. Visit search engine homepages and submit your website. Use strong keywords in the keyword form in your web design tools.
Use Google Adsense. You can sign up for an account free, and Google will place advertisements on your website that match your content. This strengthens the likelihood that visitors to your website will click on the ads, which in turn earns money for you and for Google.
Sell an original product on your website. If you're an artist, offer your sketches and paintings for sale. If you write, sell e-book versions of your books. Offer some free content to entice visitors into purchasing your products as well.
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How to Calculate Annual Leave Entitlement (6 Steps)


Write down the total number of personal days that your firm allows you to take. If this is your first year working with the firm, refer to your hire date, then subtract one personal day for each quarter before you were hired. For example, if you were hired in the second quarter and your firm allots four personal days for a calendar year, subtract two days for the two incomplete quarters. This will leave you with two personal days for the year.
Calculate monthly time off accrual days. Look at your agreed weekly standard work hours and your professional level. For example, if you are a full-time vice president (VP) working 35 to 40 hours a week and your firm allows VPs to take four weeks of vacation a year, divide 20 business days by 12. Your annual leave entitlement is 1.6 days a month. For companies that allow employees to accrue time off only January through October, divide 20 business days by 10 for a total of 2 days of leave accrued at the end of each worked month.
Divide your scheduled number of work hours by the number of hours in a standard work week if you are a limited-hour employee. For example, if you work an agreed 17 hours a week and the standard work week for full-time employees is 40, divide 17 by 40 to calculate the number of leave days you accrue each month. Multiply this number by 12 to arrive at your total annual leave entitlement.
Add additional time off to your total eligible leave entitlement as a full-time employee depending on the tenure policy. Some companies award full-time employees another week to leave entitlement after you have worked at the firm for five or 10 years and another week after you have worked at the company for 20 or more years. For example, if you are a VP who has worked at the firm for 20 years, add four weeks of base vacation time with three additional weeks of leave you earned for serving the firm for 20 years plus your four standard annual personal days for a total of 39 annual leave days.
Include approved carry-over time or unused vacation days from the previous year. Total your personal days, approved carry-over, base vacation weeks and additional vacation weeks for tenure.
Factor in the total number of sick days that your firm allows each year. For example, if your firm allows full-time and limited-hour employees to take five sick days a year, add these five sick days to your total allotted vacation and personal days combined.
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Saturday, August 29, 2015

How to be a good host for houseguests


Know when your guests are coming and how long they will stay. Clear your calendar to make sure you can spend plenty of time with them. Ideally, try to have someone in your home who can accompany them at all times. If this is not possible, try to have a car available for them in case they want to explore the area on their own or run an errand.
Stock up: A good host has well-fed guests. Find out what your guests can and cannot eat and which foods they enjoy the most. For breakfast, standard fare usually suffices: eggs, coffee, toast and so forth. For lunch, sandwiches are generally fine. Save your guest's favorite dishes for dinner. Party food (tacos, pizza, etc.) can make for a great and simple dinner.
Clean up: Having guests is a great reason to straighten up the house. This is the time to recycle the pile of mail and magazines on the kitchen table, scrub the tub, mop the floors and vacuum the rugs.
Mind the animals: Make sure you know whether your guests have pet allergies. If so, find out how strong they are and plan accordingly. With mild allergies, it will do to vacuum thoroughly and keep the animal away from the guest. But if your guest has a strong pet allergy, it may be necessary to confine the animal or have it stay somewhere else for the time being.
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Monday, August 24, 2015

How to Install APC on cPanel


Download the PECL extensions package. APC is one of the extensions included in the package. The latest package can be downloaded from the PECL page of php.net (see Resources). Once downloaded, open the package and locate the php_apc.dll file.
Log into 'WHM cPanel' and navigate to the extensions directory. Note that you will need to have administrative access to add or remove extensions. Having a standard cPanel account that comes with a shared hosting package will not be suitable. You will need to have access to the WHM reseller panel, which typically comes with VPS and dedicated server packages. Adding extensions here will make the extension available to all cPanel accounts on the server.
Upload the php_apc.dll file to the extensions directory. Click 'Add an Extension.' Browse to the location of the file, then select 'Upload.' The APC extension will be added to the server.
Add the extension to the php.ini file. Open the file with a text editor such as Windows Notepad. Scroll down to the section for other extensions and add the following code to the end of the section: extension=php_apc.dll.
Add the extension parameters to the php.ini file. Add the following code to the end of the php.ini file:apc.shm_segments=1
apc.optimization=0
apc.shm_size=128
apc.ttl=7200
apc.user_ttl=7200
apc.num_files_hint=1024
apc.mmap_file_mask=/tmp/apc.XXXXXX
apc.enable_cli=1After the code has been added, click “File” then click “Save.” Use the cPanel file manager to upload the revised php.ini file to the root directory of the server.
Upload the apc.php file to the server. Refer back to the PECL extensions package to locate the apc.php file. Use the cPanel file manager to upload the file to the root directory of your server.
Open the apc.php file in your browser. Navigate to 'yourname.com/apc.php' (replacing “yourname.com” with your Internet domain). This will open the Alternative PHP Cache manager for your server.
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