It's widely agreed among users that the Strayhorn upgrade of WordPress was the best upgrade they ever did. The extensive user community of WordPress all gave input, and the Strayhorn upgrade not only does everything they asked for, but also does it all well. In addition, the dozens of plugins to expand the capabilities of your blog system give you one of the best and most complete blogs available today.
Did I mention that it's free and open-source?
Strayhorn puts years of blogging experience to work in its new systems. It is compliant with all standards, easy to learn and fast to install, and has a lean programming base that makes your work fast and efficient. If you're intimidated by even this, you can look for a web hosting partner offering a one-click install of WordPress, or register for a free account on .
A Guided Tour
If you're used to using the old WordPress interface, you'll find a lot of differences. The admin interface especially is changed from the old version. The dashboard gives you easy access to information you really need to see, like the last five posts you created and the last five comments made to your blogs overall. In addition, you'll be able to see your most-wanted statistics on posts, comments, and categories, and incoming links from Technorati.
In another section of the dashboard you'll find WordPress-specific data: the most recent posts and tons of useful links from WordPress Planet. Your most recent drafts are also listed here.
In the Write section, you have the choice between the traditional Write Post and the new Write Page. Write Post is precisely what you expect it to be. Write Page is a completely new feature, and one that is not shared by most blogging systems. With Write Page, you can easily create an about page, a contact page, a links page, and other nifty informational sections you want your readers to have access to. This is something that every blogging system should include!
The Manage section has all your editing and organization tools together in one convenient place, including comments that need moderating. The Links section also is precisely what you would expect to see here, including adding, managing, organizing, and importing tools.
The Presentation section is another great new tool that few blogging systems offer. You can either select a Theme or you can use the Theme Editor to modify files in any given theme. Themes in WordPress are templates that have been set up to create all the different pages you might need for your blog, including a 404 page, archives, comments, headers, indexes, regular pages, searches, etc. If you want other page types you can create them or modify the ones other people have created. And you can take complete templates and add your own graphics, colors, etc. to make your blog look as personal as you wish.
If you don't have enough options already, there are tons of plugins you can activate, edit, or download. Many plugins come with the Strayhorn release; others are available from the WordPress Plugin Repository. As of this writing, the Photo Gallery plugin is a little hard to use, but it's likely that will be corrected.
In the Options section, you can choose options for display like title, tagline, email address, date/time format, etc. as well as Writing options that include some neat tricks like blogging by email. You can also set your reading options for blog pages, syndication feeds, and other things.
Also in Options is the Discussion section, perhaps the most useful tool in this blogging system to combat content spam. Do you need to moderate comments? Or flag particular words to block automatically? Blacklist problem users? Do you want to just flat-out nuke content containing certain words entirely? You can do that. Permalinks can be set to write directly to your .htaccess file if you want them to, and links in general use the rel="nofollow" tag automatically. In addition, there are a dozen other options you'll find useful.
There are dozens of other nice features outside the administrative section of Strayhorn. Users report finding hardly any bugs, and the code is clean and tight. WordPress developers have gone out of their way to find out what the users really want for this upgrade, and it looks like they ended up with a world-class package that comes complete with a very active user community – the best of all worlds. And free. Nice.
1.5 Inch Memory Foam
And if that number doesn't wake you up and have you sitting on the edge of your seat, consider for a moment that he reached this level in less than a year. His company only started using AdSense in September 2004.
Calacanis runs Weblogs Inc., a network dedicated to creating trade weblogs across niche industries. And quickly proven that AdSense is a credible advertising partner.
As their network has grown, so has their AdSense revenue. In January 2005 they earned an average of $580 per day. In March it was $737. In May it was $1,585. One day in July, just before he made the blog entry referred to above, they earned $2,335. Remember that is just for one day. If they can take that daily average to $2,740 they'll be earning a rate of $1 million for a year. And Calacanis predicts that reaching daily earnings of $3,000 or even $5,000 is quite achievable.
That's quite an achievement. Keep in mind that Calacanis has 103 bloggers on the payroll and nine staffers. Even so, many webmasters would give an arm or a leg to have even a third of that.
Google's AdSense has been revolutionary. It has become firmly established as the darling of the online advertising industry. Although rumors are heard of major competitors launching a similar service, AdSense's premier position seems secure for now.
In essence, AdSense has made it possible for almost anyone with a web site or blog to earn some revenue from advertising, without having to employ sales people or spend precious time searching for advertisers.
AdSense works like this. Webmasters sign up for an account in just a few minutes. They receive a small snippet of code to include on their web pages. Google will then automatically serve advertisements that are relevant to the content on the webmaster's pages. When someone visits the webmaster's site and clicks on one of Google's AdSense advertisements, the webmaster earns a fee. Advertisers can pay anywhere from five cents to a hundred dollars per click, and the webmaster receives a percentage of that fee.
Many webmasters are content with earning five to ten dollars from AdSense to cover the cost of web hosting. But many, unsurprising, have higher ambitions. At a popular WebmasterWorld forum, participants share tips and encouragement on reaching a goal of $300 per day from AdSense. So it is no wonder that Calacanis created quite a buzz when he made his million dollar blog entry.
Google have proven once again that they excel at designing innovative Internet services. If you are in the web industry and have not yet used AdSense, then perhaps you should try it out. Or if you are already using it, perhaps Calacanis impressive results will encourage you to track the performance of your AdSense units more closely, fine tune their positions and formats, and take your earnings to a new level.
Both Danny Wirken & Jason Handique are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.