about 3 weeks ago - No comments
It’s time once again for the Weekly Mash Up and it was a great week. It was so good I had a hard time cutting the list of articles down to only 11. But I did and I only choose ones that would be helpful. This week’s Mash Up includes articles in Blogging, content creation,…
about 2 months ago - 4 comments
So have you been thinking about updating your theme, maybe upgrading from one of those free WordPress themes? Are you looking to replace your theme with a theme recommended by some of the top professional bloggers in the world? If you are thinking about making a change to your site, your in luck, StudioPressis offering…
about 2 months ago - No comments
The one thing I found I do most often with WordPress once I have it setup, configured, and the site is running smoothly is, customizing the look of the theme to give it a more unique look to the site. One of the easiest ways to change up the look is to use plugins, but…
about 4 months ago - No comments
This week’s Mash Up is a good one with sixteen articles and several bonus articles attached to the listed articles! The mash up includes articles I found helpful or interesting. As the title says, I found articles about Blogging Tips, Design, Development, Photography, WordPress, and Inspirational Art. 16 Great Articles Blogging Tips, Design, Development, Photography,…
about 5 months ago - No comments
This week’s Wordprss article is about the layout of a wordpress theme. Last week, I wrote an article about Yoast’s Anatomy of a WordPress Cheat Sheet at WordPress Junkies and why its so important to know the layout of a WordPress theme. Why is Knowing the Layout of a WordPress Theme Important? It’s important to…
about 5 months ago - No comments
Its been about a month since our last Mash up, but I have been collection some create articles since the last one was published. This week’s Mash Up has 10 great articles with a few bonus articles that in topics of freelance, SEO, photography, photoshop resources, WordPress, and two great inspirational articles that are about…
about 5 months ago - No comments
Web designers and web marketers love navigation buttons and call to action buttons. These buttons, if designed correctly, can point readers towards important content, products, and subscriber list forms. Buttons are only as good as they a designed. Well designed buttons can help drive traffic to where you want. Whereas, a poorly designed button won’t…
about 5 months ago - 5 comments
This week, we are kicking off a new series, WordPress Mondays. As the title says, on Mondays Evolutionary Designs will post article(s) related to WordPress. These articles will be anything from tutorials, theme previews, about plugins, or wordpress news. These articles will come from new articles I have written in the past from other sites,…
about 6 months ago - 3 comments
Hi guys, its time once again for our weekly Mash Up series! We normally post the mash ups on Sunday night, but do to internet connection issues, I was having difficulty uploading and working on articles over the weekend. So every article from last Friday was pushed back a few days. I am still having…
about 7 months ago - 4 comments
When I browse websites, I find it annoying when a site has a link that when you click on it opens in the same tab or window you are currently reading. For me, I like to click links and have it open new windows or tabs so I can check out the link and go…
about 1 year ago
The Intense Debate Commenting System is not all it’s cracked up to be. For one thing, the I.D. points system seems very flaky. Wonder if anybody else has noticed this?
After all the crap that one particular blogging site (to remain unnamed for now) and Intense Debate put us through, forcing us to sign up if we wish to make comments there, and forcing us to open up our systems to Cookies & Javascripting (and God knows what else) so they can monitor/surveill/dossier everything we say, you would think they would consider it a priority to give us “our rightful comment-points” as a friendly little enticement to keep us participating. Apparently not the case…
Not that the “points score” is a big deal in anybody’s life, but why even have it if you can’t make it work accurately? It seemed odd that the score associated with our sign-on handle would keep bouncing around the way it has done, so we took time to mull through the various pages of postings and individually add up the points for each comment, then compared that total against the total points being published on the Profile page: Total for individual postings is 97, whereas the points showing on the Profile page are 59. WHAT IS UP WITH THAT?!
Intense Debate is basically a surveillance/censoring system that provides a blog-owner more databasing & censoring or deleting of people’s comments, with a lot of self-promotional HYPE from I.D. about how great the I.D. system is, but so far all we’ve seen has been: bogus point-scoring system, a helluva lot of hidden scriptings & ads & cookies going in and out of our hard drives, and unbelievably kludgey & slow page-loading because of aforementioned scripting, cookies, snooping, and oddball stuff. In the old days of the internet, we could just TURN OFF graphics, cookies, scripting, popups, and whatever else we did NOT want to be encumbered with, and just load the “meat” of the webpage and read what interested us. Not so with this new Intense Debate system! Intense Debate does not even try to load comments until all the aforementioned KLUDGE & CLUTTER is done coming and going, loaded and nosing around in our machines. You can try to block things like google’s or akamai’s endless snoops, but good luck at receiving page loads if you do so. And God forbid that you should have to RELOAD the page if the first time around failed–because you’re going to have to go through all that slow loading crap all over again. Or maybe you need to check something offsite before you finalize a post: Be careful about turning off Javascripting and cookies so you can traverse the Net without other sites trailing your every move, because when you come back to the posting site, ready to make your post, you probably will find your “log-in has expired,” so you’ll have to re-log in and reload the page all over again. Talk about wasting time and energy!
Furthermore, Intense Debate is rather heavyhanded in not allowing a poster to make his Profile private if he prefers. Not everyone thinks it’s a good idea to be “followed” (stalked?). Not everyone WANTS their comments to be “universal” across the entire worldwide web just because they felt moved to comment on a story on a particular site. Why isn’t there an option given for Public or Private participation? As for improving the quality of comments on a site, when I.D. is used, that’s debatable. Seems the points system mostly invites people to assault each other and compete with each other at least as much if not more than the older system where people merely commented on things and moved on. All this seems to be a distraction away from the content that the site is trying to provide.
One last irritant is that the SIGN IN and SIGN UP links are mixed up on the site. Instead of having a simple way to LOG IN, I.D. has at least three different methods and they’re all mixed up, with no clear solution until you waste hours and finally learn your way through their illogical maze.
Further, half the time when you click on a link to log in, the system throws you into one of the ubiquitous extra sets of links splattered all over the site page, and then you really have lost all your progress and you must again start all over. Absurd!
These annoyances are really unforgiveable and seem like they are deliberate in order to FORCE people to notice the crappy ads all over the site. The Intense Debate system WILL NOT LOAD until all the garbage has had a chance to load. They COULD & SHOULD have the LOG IN link load right away and also the Comment Box, so those who just want to have their say and leave the site can do so. WAKE UP, Intense Debate!
For a company that claims to be among the “best” blogging and commenting sites on the planet, this I.D. system seems very unwieldy and aggravating. The original idea to provide content and allow folks to comment on it was pretty brilliant, and we’ve enjoyed using the particular site in question for quite some time, but this latest twist of forcing Intense Debate as our “gatekeeper” is pretty annoying… and may force us to go elsewhere to make our pithy remarks–which, regardless of which “Points Score” you use, seem to be pretty appeciated by other visitors of the site in question.
about 1 year ago
Yes, I think on another blog I read this news that there are problems with intense debate and CommentLuv. I hope that does not follow and that is why I hesitate to put this system in my blog. For now only use intense debate
Julio-Debate Popular recently posted..Intense Debate en mi blog para ustedes
about 1 year ago
I am looking into using intense debate. I like some features, like being able to setup profiles so I can see my comments across various blogs. The voting could be useful if done right. So far I have tried it on one blog and I really don’t like how the dashboard shows hundred of spam comments and I go to view them but I cannot unless I turn off the intensedebate plugin. They should have some simple captcha type option in the plugin – in case I don’t want to force people to login.
John Hunter recently posted..Picking the Right Bank Can Eliminate ATM Fees
about 11 months ago
The points system is very screwy. My points over 200. Yet, my score has been dropping – one point at a time – from a high of 86.
To get to 86, it mysteriously jumped up from 64 in a matter of days.
I don’t see any connection between total points & my own score.