Delicious Brains is starting a new…
Delicious Brains is starting a new series on building “Reactive” WordPress plugins with this first post on Backbone.js.
Delicious Brains is starting a new series on building “Reactive” WordPress plugins with this first post on Backbone.js.
Corey Maass and Cory Miller continue the development of their new WordPress plugin, Crop.Express. They dive into the world of Open Graph (OG) images for WordPress. Cory and Corey explore the benefits of using OG image templates, providing customization options to meet client demands, and incorporating effective pricing models. Whether you’re a WordPress professional or a business owner, this episode will equip you with the knowledge and strategies to create visually captivating content that captivates audiences and drives engagement.
Ashley Rich over at Delicious Brains relates some lessons learned from building WP Scanner, a WordPress-centric web app. The app was built on Laravel with Spark, and there’s a WordPress plugin that is installed that communicates with WP Scanner’s servers. Ashley mentions some of the third-party services he used. His advice about optimizing too early is…
Matt Shaw at Delicious Brains compares the speed of admin-ajax to the WordPress REST API, and on average saw about a 15% improvement.
Delicious Brains concludes their fantastic series on hosting WordPress yourself with examples of Nginx configurations.
In this episode, Brian and Joe are joined by Zac Gordon, and the three of them discuss the state of JavaScript and JavaScript frameworks in a WordPress context.
Who is not using Local? Is it an Open Web tool? Let’s review some “Local history” and consider where WP Engine’s popular developer tools could be headed.