Tag: plugins

  • Typo in an inbound link? Redirection to the rescue!

    Jump ahead to the solution to my problem

    Every Sunday, when my cartoon gets posted on ReadWriteWeb, I head on over to have a look and join whatever conversation’s going on.

    Today’s visit was much the same thing… until I noticed a little wonkiness: a sentence that stopped dead just before the cartoon. Worse, it was a linked sentence… and worse yet, it was the sentence that links from ReadWriteWeb to Noise to Signal.

    I clicked on it. Good news: I landed on RobCottingham.ca. Bad news: I was on a 404 page. Because I forgot to include a closing quotation mark in the link to my cartoon site, that link points to:

    http://robcottingham.ca/cartoon%3ENoise%20to%20Signal%20cartoons%20here
    %3C/a%3E.%3C/em%3E%3C/p%3E%3Cdiv%20style=

    No surprise it doesn’t go anywhere useful, right? That’s kind of a big deal, because a) I don’t like people getting frustrated when they click on my links, and b) a lot of people drop by my site every Sunday thanks to that link.

    I dropped my editor a note apologizing and alerting him to the issue (apart from everything else, it also broke the layout on that page). Which is a start, but there’d be a few hours until he saw my email (remember, this is Sunday). And in the meantime, there’d be a lot of people clicking and saying “Wha’a?”

    What I wanted them to do was click and be taken instantly to the original link. To do that, I needed to set up what’s known as a redirect – an instruction to my web server saying “If anyone tries to load that screwed-up address, take them to the real address instead.”

    And ideally, it should be a particular kind of redirect — a 301 redirect, to be technical — that tells search engines, “This item has permanently moved to this other location.”

    I could have done this by editing a file in my site’s folder named the .htaccess file, which has a series of instructions for the server covering everything from memory allocation to redirection. There are plenty of great tutorials on how to do exactly that.

    But that’s a little cumbersome (especially because this happens just infrequently enough that I have to relearn how to do it every single time). And as a WordPress user, I’ve grown accustomed to talented programmers creating great plugins to solve nearly every technical issue that might come up.

    Which brings me to John Godley, and a great little plugin called Redirection.

    The Redirection plugin allows me to deal with a whole slew of issues. Had to change my permalink structure because of a plugin update? I can take care of it with a few clicks and keystrokes, permanently redirecting traffic from the old URLs to the new ones. Discovered a bunch of frequent 404 errors from someone’s mistyped URLs? Fixed! And I can see all of my redirects at once, group them however I want, and see just how much traffic each one has diverted (read: “just how much traffic Redirection has routed to the right destination”).

    It’s great, it’s free, and it saved a lot of people from thinking ill of me tonight. Check it out.

  • Updating this plugin (just killed my site) (a WordPress song)

    So I saw this from Alex a few minutes ago:

    I have a shiny toonie for the person to write, record & upload a song called “Upgrading this plugin just killed my site.”Tue May 17 17:19:34 via HootSuite

    I’m comping you, sweetheart.

    Upgrading This Plugin (Just Killed My Site) (43 s)

    And here are the lyrics:

    I searched high and low down on WordPress dot org
    looked for advice on the forums and boards
    Decided the new version would work just right
    But upgrading this plugin just killed my site

    Just killed my site!
    When my traffic was doing so well
    Just killed my site!
    A single click sent the whole thing to hell

    I dove in deep, and I launched Sequel Pro
    Oh holy crap – where did my database go?
    Looks like I’m going to have a long sleepless night
    Cos upgrading this plugin just killed my site

    Just killed my site!
    When my traffic was doing so well
    Just killed my site!
    A single click sent the whole thing to hell

     

  • The fine art of asking for help

    Alex King, one of the premier plug-in developers for WordPress (the blogging software that runs this here corner of the Web), is getting pretty frustrated.

    Every time he releases a piece of software, all of it free of charge, he’s deluged by support requests — often questions that could be answered if the users had just read the documentation that goes along with his code (a phenomenon addressed by some with a terse “RTFM”).

    (more…)