Delicious Brains shared some great ideas…
Delicious Brains shared some great ideas they had for adding more creativity and context with testimonial styling at SpinupWP. 🧠
Delicious Brains shared some great ideas they had for adding more creativity and context with testimonial styling at SpinupWP. 🧠
Delicious Brains is starting a new series on building “Reactive” WordPress plugins with this first post on Backbone.js.
Ian Jones has written an incredibly comprehensive guide to contributing to WordPress core on the Delicious Brains blog. They’ve really been doubling down on good dev-centric content lately, which I love to see. The post includes a focus on an area that doesn’t get enough attention, which is ticket workflow. There are specific landing pages…
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.
If you run a site that sends a lot of emails and is considered a third-party service, then you might want to pay some attention to Amazon SES. Matt Shaw over at Delicious Brains digs into SES as an option for WordPress mail with a great walk-through. ✉️
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 summarizes for Delicious Brains why most WordPress email plugins suck: “they simply don’t do enough to alert you of potential issues and don’t give you a way to rectify them.” 📧