Media Library Gallery
April 30, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
For travel websites that continually wrestle with how to arrange and display photos on blogs and websites, this plugin is the answer.
It couldn’t be simpler. Media Library Gallery automatically creates a gallery with images from every post. To include the gallery in a page, simply write in the post: [media-library-gallery nb=XX] where XX is the number of pictures for a page.
- Live Demo: Morbleau
- Download Media Library Gallery Plugin
- More information and installation instructions
Turn Out Mag
April 16, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment

A modern design, with soothing colors. Pre-programmed for a flickr photo feed, featured posts, a slideshow gallery and Google Adsense.
Download & Details | View Live
Equilibrium
April 15, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
If your site needs segmented categories and lots of structure, then this is a great theme. Easily customized and re-colored, with a lot of great thumbnailed graphics and room for interaction through RSS feeds and subscriptions.
Download & Details | View Live
Purple Haze
This theme features lots of room for advertising, with a lot of style, too. Boxes for pull-quotes and graphics and a fixed right-navigation bar make this an interesting theme with lots of potential for travel writers and bloggers looking for something a little different.
Download & Details | View Live
Red Carpet Magazine
April 14, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
This magazine style theme is perfect for travel writers covering destinations with theater or events. Based on the style of People Magazine, this theme is colorful and graphical.
Download & Details | View Live
Feedsmith Feedburner
April 13, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment
One of the best reasons to use WordPress is the ability to utilize the built in syndication capabilities. It frees the blogger/writer from the technological need to know how to create an RSS feed, or how to ping a service to get their content indexed. Using the right mix of technology it’s possible to get pages into directories and search engines in mere hours.
So, if the indexing of the content is the right hook, having interested people signup for all your future stuff would be the body blow. WordPress, by way of Feedburner, takes care of that, too.
FeedBurner, recently purchased by Google, takes the feed of your site (which is automatically generated by WordPress) and publishes it for you in a format ready to view on their igoogle.com home page, in the Google reader, and in the Google Alert system.
In other words, they do quite a lot of work for you. But it gets better. Built into Feedburner is the ability for your subscribers to receive an email every time you publish NEW content. Automatically – meaning you don’t have to do anything. Really. I’m not kidding. You can download the subscribers and Google doesn’t eat them for lunch or anything, either.
Which brings us to this plugin. Rather than try and hack the core RSS code to redirect the feed to Feedburner, this plugin hijacks – with your permission – the feed to point to your Feedburner account.
Installation
Download the plugin, then follow the instructions below to begin forwarding all WordPress feed traffic to your FeedBurner feed.
- Copy the plugin file, FeedBurner_FeedSmith_Plugin.php into your default WordPress plugin directory, wp-content/plugins/ .
- Activate the plugin by logging into your WordPress administration area, clicking Plugins, then clicking Activate at the end of the “FeedBurner FeedSmith” row.
- In the WordPress administration area, begin the configuration by clicking Options and then the FeedBurner FeedSmith sub-option.
- Follow the links to create your FeedBurner feeds, or if they already exist, simply fill in their URLs in the boxes provided.Note: If you currently use the old, 2005-vintage version of the Ordered List FeedBurner plugin that generates a FeedBurner-specific URL (an example: www.yoursite.com/feedburner_838196/), that URL is no longer available or necessary. You will have to reset your FeedBurner feed’s Original Feed address to now use your standard blog feed address. Additionally, you should examine any .htaccess files that control access to your WordPress installation’s content and remove any existing references that forward or redirect your feeds, as these references will no longer be necessary.
- Verify your URLs in the text entry fields, and click Save.
Now all of your WordPress feed traffic should be redirected to FeedBurner.







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