Turn Your WordPress Blog into an Online Shop or Affiliate Store with ShopperPress

Visit: premiumpress.us to find out more about this fantastic WordPress theme. Overview The ShopperPress theme, unlike many other ecommerce premium WordPress themes on the market, offers it’s users a wide range of fantastic options. Most notably, you can use your ShopperPress theme to – create an unlimited amount of online shops – create an unlimited amount of Amazon/eBay/CJ affiliate stores – create an unlimited amount of software/mp3/infomation download sites And much much more… ShopperPress also has a wonderful set of payment gateway options which enables it to work seamlessly with PayPal, Google Checkout, as well as a whole host of other payment gateways. ShopperPress really is the future of hassle-free ecommerce. So, if you’ve wanted to know how to: – setup an online shop? – build an affiliate site? – start your own download website? ShopperPress is the answer. Please visit: premiumpress.us for more information about this premium WordPress theme.

Joomla!

Google Tech Talks December 21, 2006 ABSTRACT Wilco Jansen, organization administrator and mentor for Joomla! in Google Summer of Code 2006, will present along with one of his fellow mentors, Louis Landry, on the Joomla! project, its community and the organizations participation in GSoC 2006. Credits: Speaker:Wilco Jansen, Speaker:Louis Landry

WordPress Tutorial – How to Make a “Child” Page (Subpage) and How to Hide Sidebar Widget Link

This beginner-level WordPress tutorial shows 1. How to make a “child” page or subpage of another page (a “parent” page) using the WordPress 2.7 editing interface. And 2. How to hide a link in the Pages sidebar widget, in other words, how to keep a link to a page from showing in the Pages sidebar widget by putting the page ID number into the “Exclude” box in the Pages sidebar widget dialog box. Making “child” pages (subpages) is useful because you may not want all your pages to show in the main page navigation of your WordPress theme. In most themes, only “main” pages (pages that don’t have a “parent”) show up in the main page navigation. In some newer WordPress themes, child pages show up in a popup menu that appears when you roll over the main page link. And in some themes, sub-subpages show up in popup menus as well. These are sometimes called “cascading” navigation menus: sub-subpages show up in a popup menu when you roll over a subpage link. The second part of this tutorial shows how to hide (or “exclude”) a link to a page that would otherwise appear in the links of the Pages sidebar widget. This is useful for a number of reasons. One is that when you make a static page your Home page in WordPress, some themes will show the link to this static page as a second home page link in your main navigation. By making the Home page a subpage and excluding that link from the Pages sidebar navigation, you can eliminate the double Home page link.