I have finally fixed my ftp problem. Once I transferred the file, how do i make it publish on Wordpress?
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I have finally fixed my ftp problem. Once I transferred the file, how do i make it publish on Wordpress?
Welcome to TalkGraphics. Xara & WordPress are not compatible. WordPress is a content management system which builds the website on the server using a database to form the content prior to delivering it to your browser. Xara creates predefined webpages based on html.
+1 on above, simply not compatible. You could, of course, prototype in xara and then get a developer to create the site in wordpress or if you are so inclined you can learn to develop with wordpress, not easy but certainly worthwhile if you're doing it for a living.
Learning Wordpress is not as scary as you may think. I recently put together my very first site on WordPress I followed a Udemy course Wordpress for Beginners and I found a page builder for wordpress called Beaver Builder that was a tremendous help. I used elements from a Xara built site such as images, and photos that I exported as png or jpegs, some text was copied and pasted and one page from the xara site was just linked to from the wordpress site. The linked to page was done because it has some elements that I have not yet learned to replicate in wordpress, and for the time being this works just fine.
Developing in Wordpress is a very different skill set in my experience. But that doesn't mean that Xara doesn't have its place. I decided to go the wordpress route for this site because a) I wanted to learn wordpress and b) I wanted to do a blog type site that could be easily added to that we could easily log in to on a browser and have an admin panel. I do not have any intentions of replacing xara but rather I have added another tool to my toolbox :)
In 2010 I converted about 6 websites from Xara to WordPress. It was interesting and the blog features were useful. Then WordPress began with their security updates. I used a skinning product as well. That company began to falter. Updates seemed endless with more than one of them breaking the sites. Forum checking confirmed it was the WordPress/plugin companies as the source of breakage. Then, sadly, one of my clients died. He was a writer and there was 4 years of blogs and comments. No easy way to harvest that data.
Subsequently, I have moved all sites back to Xara and cobbled together a blogging feature. I found WP too demanding and unreliable. Too many other companies with control over the content and look. That was my experience.
Dan,
When you say you cobbled together a blogging feature, I would assume that the blogging update is done just once in a while? Otherwise it would seem to be a lot of work for normal updates. Can you elaborate some more on what you have done?
Ray
I'm quite interested in this 'ftp problem'. Was it incidental to the Post request?
Why have you not come back?
When did you buy XDPX?
When did you realised it had nothing to do with WordPress?
Sorry, this is all negative to a new joiner (welcome) but understanding where you've come from saves so much time and wasted effort.
Acorn
Certainly, Acorn. The traffic on the site was comparatively low to a fully public site, so curation was easy. We (client and I) made the decision that a manual system for a blog would more than meet his needs. Articles are published, comments are emailed, and approved comments are manually added to the conversation stream. The client received comments directly and emailed approved comments and replies to me. I simply added them to the page stream for that article. Like a traffic circle (round-about) it works quite well at low traffic but not at high volumes. We averaged 10 to 15 comments per week.
I saw it as a security issue. With all the non-sense that goes on with hacked site, I encouraged the client to not use a direct access commenting system, like WP, so that no one but he had access to the site. Automattic (WP makers) and any plugin used have some form of access to the site files. I've seen too many bad plugins break a site. Unfortunately, he is the client that passed and the site is down. Hope that helps.
I found the problem with CMS sites is the requirements to update them to the latest update version. Not a problem updating the main program but a pia updating all the plug-ins. Clients used to complain about ongoing costs to them for my work as the site often looked no different.
I like to put together all the cons that wordpress has. Any idea as to where I can collect this info?
Egg, my experience exactly. I used StudioPress as the theme for the site. I also had a commercial site. At that point WP, Studio Press, Woo Commerce, plus six plugins all rained incessant updates every week. The incompatibility of some updates with the WP and Studio Press s/w "broke" the site once too often. Woo Commerce is its own labyrinth. The Xara publication, including its commercialization, was noticeably more manageable. The use of WP never materially increased traffic or sales, only labor. The use of Xara did not decrease traffic or sales, only labor. IMHO
Thanks Dan, my questions were pointed back at dawnschoice, who appears to be a fly-past; your reply should have been in answer to RKissane.
Acorn
I'd hope you will present a balanced view rather than just the "cons".
There is no value with presenting the bad things about something if the positives aren't also mentioned. It would be like having a list of the problems that Xara has and omitting the very positive stuff.
There has been mention of the ongoing maintenance cost of wordpress or CMS - that shouldn't be seen as an issue if the client is made aware in advance that self-updateable sites are not maintenance free and that will cost money.
Xara is perfect for many people, but for other clients Wordpress or any other CMS based system is going to be a better fit. It all depends on the requirements.
One of my friends has gone with a web developer that charges her and arm and leg for updating her plugins. Up until now she was not aware of how fast I could do this, after showing her, she knew she was being ripped off. So many web designers do this with their mumbo jumbo explanation that it takes a long time to do a simple thing, all bull.
but that is not a con to wordpress itself is it ? - just a con to some web designers [there's a joke in there somewhere, I just know it ...:)]
It's not at all as simple as you suggest. So many people equate their time to the time spent doing some work, but their hourly rate should be spread across the easy and hard jobs, the jobs that go wrong and the time when no income is being earned and to cover the overheads for the business. The cost of doing a job is not just a figure that covers the time for that work alone.
Have you tried the ManageWP program? I am using the free version with half a dozen WP site, and it updates them automatically once a week. It also backs up all the sites once a month. It receives a lot of praise from users. Evidently it now belongs to GoDaddy.
It is nice not having to do all the updates manually, and so far nothing has broken the sites... well, except for one that stopped working before I ever got it finished. Something went wrong and I finally just deleted it.
Ed