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Change Default Image Upload Sizes in WordPress

One of my biggest problems with WordPress is with uploading images. I try to keep all images a max of 640 px wide, but then link the images to the original size so you can click and see the full image with Fancybox. The only problem is, by default, WordPress sets large images to 1024 px width, then medium images are a tiny 300 px width. And if you go to change the image size in the default WordPress photo uploader, you have to choose a size percentage. Not an ideal situation, and it was frustrating enough that I’d started resizing images in Photoshop Elements before uploading them.

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Restore Previous Versions and Deleted Files in Dropbox

Have you ever changed a file, and then seconds later realized that you still need the information in the original document? Or have you ever wished you could restore the last good version of a file that’s been corrupted? If your file was saved in Dropbox and the change happened in the past month, chances are you can still get the original file. Here’s how to restore any file, or an older version of a file, in your Dropbox account. Continue Reading →

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Techinch 2.0 Beta – It’s time for a quick refresh

It’s been a great year for Techinch.com, and after being online for 15 months, it is time for some changes. Reading Seth Godin’s excellent Poke the Box eBook inspired me to work harder than ever on Techinch and start new projects that will broaden the scope of the site while keeping it focused on Making Tech Simpler. I’d already been planning on updating the site, and have been tweaking a theme refresh for a while, but couldn’t take the leap and go ahead and try the new theme.

First Year Update

Techinch started out as a WordPress.com-powered blog that I created for a class project in early 2009. I was dumbfounded that one post I wrote on adding a network printer to a Windows 7 x64 computer quickly rose to the top of Google for several related searches, and got around 100 views per day. I’d never considered doing tech writing as a job before that, but my writing professor pushed me to put my best work into my online writing, since you never knew what might come from it. Later that summer, I started writing at Labnol.org, and am very grateful to Amit Angarwal for giving me a chance and helping me get started writing on a larger scale.

Then, in January 2010, I moved my WordPress.com site to a self-hosted WordPress site and rebranded it as Techinch.com. I started out with a dark, smooth theme from ElegantThemes, and set to work getting more helpful content written than ever before. I started out adding AdSense, but quickly saw that the ads were seldom relevant to the content, cluttered the pages, and didn’t even pay out that much. That’s why I was so excited to be able to join the Yoggrt Ads network once the traffic had built up, and have been constantly pleased with the quality and content of the ads they serve.

Techinch.com 1.0 with a stock ElegantThemes theme

Over the past year, Techinch’s content has been featured on a wide number of websites, from Lifehacker to Techcrunch’s Crunchgear blog, and my recent article about the iPad being like a microwave of computing was on the front page of Hacker News and Reddit’s Apple section for hours, and even mentioned on the 5by5 podcast and MacStories. Edit: And, in the past 2 days, it’s been featured on Wired.com and CNN, too! It’s been exciting and humbling to see my writing linked across the web, and has motivated me to keep writing quality articles and building Techinch.

 

Techinch.com 2.0 Beta

That brings us to today. The original theme for Techinch has served us well, but the default fonts and layout made it somewhat difficult to read. Hey, I even used Instapaper sometimes to clean up my own articles. That’s bad. Last winter, I’d invested in WooThemes Canvas theme with the intent of switching the site to a cleaner theme. Months later, I’ve finally bitten the bullet and switched to my own tweaked version of Canvas. Of all things, I chose an actual canvas-looking background, and then used Google Fonts to add character. So, the new theme you see is all new just for Techinch, and I think it really goes good with the site’s goals of making tech simpler. After all, if articles are difficult to read, it can’t be much simpler!

Techinch 2.0 beta - WooThemes Canvas powered, typography centric theme

At the same time, I’ve made several other changes to the site over recent months. I added WPtouch Pro late last year, and the recent update brought iPad support as well, so Techinch should look great on any device. Now I’ve just got to port the new design to the mobile theme! Additionally, I was able to consolidate many of the plugins I use on Techinch with Automattic’s new Jetpack, and also started backing up the site with Automattic’s new VaultPress service (more on both soon). So, between WordPress and Automattic’s services, WooThemes, WPtouch, and DreamHost, the site’s in good hands and now I should be able to just focus on writing!

 

The Job is Never Finished

There’s still a lot that needs changed, but I personally think it’s heading in the right direction. Over the next days and weeks, I’ll be tweaking the theme and site more, especially:

  • A new logo. Techinch really needs a new logo. If you’re a logo designer and would like to design it, I’d be excited to talk!
  • Cleaning up the sidebar. I think it’d look better narrower, with less bright icons and smaller fonts. Thoughts?
  • Fix the menus. They look awful right now. Please, don’t hover over them yet … it’ll hurt your eyes.
  • Adding a search box. Just noticed that’s missing.
  • Adding a Featured Post slider; for some reason, it’s not working in the theme right now. I’ll need to investigate that.
  • Switching over most of the icons and theme images to the Pictos Font, since I’m using it with CSS @font-face on Techinch now.
  • Making sure the typography is standardized throughout the theme. Right now, there’s still some Arial/Helvetica sticking out, especially in widgets.
  • Add WooTumblog support, and then I’ll start sharing more links and small tips about tech right here on Techinch.
  • Get the author box and site description updated.
  • Tweak Techinch’s WPtouch Pro mobile themes to match the mothership’s theme!
  • Add a MailChimp powered newsletter to Techinch so you can read without visiting the site.
  • And more!

Let’s Talk!

So, this is your chance to give your opinion about Techinch.com. Do you like the new theme, or was the old one better in your opinion? What social sharing, read later, and bookmarking tools do you use regularly and want integrated? Evernote, Instapaper, Facebook, Twitter, or others? Do you think the fonts are easy to read now? If not, what would look better?

At any rate, it’s exciting to be pushing Techinch.com to the next level, and with the new theme design, I hope I can make more gradual changes and keep Techinch.com working great for years to come. Everything here is written to help you understand tech better and integrate it into your life without having to spend years learning it. If there’s every anything you’d like to see explained or reviewed, please let me know in the comments below or on the contact form. Thanks for reading, and here’s to many more years of tech tutorials, reviews, and more on Techinch.com!

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iPad: The Microwave Oven of Computing

In 1967, American consumers were introduced to the new, must have item for their kitchens: the microwave oven. This device, manufactured mainly by defense contractors such as Raytheon due to their expertise with magnetron, the device that generates microwaves in a radar system or microwave oven, was now supposed to be a fixture in every home, restaurant, and more. It could heat food faster, use less energy, and be less likely to burn your house down than a traditional oven. And it cost just under $500. What more could you ask?

Actually, there was a lot customers could ask. First, why in the world do you need yet another way to heat food? Kitchens already have an oven and range, plus perhaps a toaster, waffle iron, or a grill on the back porch. And the coffee pot can keep coffee hot anyhow. Do you really need another oven? Plus, surely it won’t work quite like an oven, or quite like a stove. It’s like something in the middle. How could we need that?

Looking just at the specs, a microwave didn’t make sense to many. So manufacturers bundled them with cookbooks that detailed the many things you could cook in a microwave. Look, you can make this great Chinese dish in a microwave! Our microwave lets you bake a cake! Need a hot cup of this complicated spiced cider? It’ll only take 15 steps in our microwave! They thought the microwave needed to be a full oven

But, wonder of all wonders, people started buying microwaves and using them regularly. In the store, a microwave didn’t seem like a must-have item to many, but once you incorporated it into your daily life, it was irreplaceable. How in the world did we used to heat up leftovers? Sure, people tried out the crazy, complicated recipes, but for the most part, they found new uses for microwaves. The microwave didn’t have to be a regular oven or stove; it was a wholely new category of cooking device that made cooking accessible to even the least talented guy on earth. Who would have ever put an oven in a hotel room, but it makes perfect sense to put a microwave in one.

The microwave isn’t easier for every cooking task, and perhaps it takes longer to prepare a complicated meal in a microwave. Perhaps no award winning meal will be created in one, unless it’s a special contest for microwave cooking. But it simplified simple cooking, and consumers around the world saw it as a necessary piece of equipment within in years of it becoming popular.

Last year, Apple introduced the iPad, a computing device many have struggled to classify. It’s bigger than a smartphone or iPod, smaller than a computer, but can do some things you’d otherwise do on both of these. You can type a document in Pages or find your way with GPS and Google Maps. So what makes it so special? From a specs perspective, tablets don’t make sense. It cost just under $500, but if you’ve already invested in a computer and a smartphone, it’s just another expense. Plus, netbooks only cost $300, right?

Everyone thought the iPad needed traditional computer programs to be successful. After all, if you can’t use Office, what’s it good for? And so Apple made the iWork apps for iPad, and amazingly managed to capture the best of office productivity with the best of touch screens. Then VNC apps were all the rage, and tabbed browsers, and everything else you could think of that made the iPad like a PC.

And then customers bought them, took them home, and something special happened. They realized that reading eBooks or browsing the internet from their couch was nice on a tablet. They found things they would have never thought to do on a computer were fun and simple. Apps that never made sense on computers with keyboards and mice, like GarageBand and finger paint apps and eReaders, suddenly found life on a 9.7″ slate of glass and metal. Flipboard would have never become as popular on a desktop, and who would have thought of Twitter for iPad’s interface without an iPad? People that would have never touched a computer suddenly found ways a computing device could help their lives, and techies that spent 10+ hours a day in front of their glaring monitors could now break away from their hefty PCs easier. Not doing the same old stuff, but new, innovative things that you would have never thought of on a traditional PC with a screen, keyboard, and mouse on a desk. As Marco Arment said, it’s time to move on from office productivity apps; the iPad opens the window for all types of creative, interactive, personal programs. Finally, the term Personal Computer actually makes sense.

The world has discovered that the iPad doesn’t have to be a full computer to be successful. It’s a new form factor that makes computing more accessible to more people than ever. Sure, you might not create a new app on it, and there’s still not Photoshop on iOS. You can’t bake a medium-rare roast in a microwave, either. But now instead of waiting for your computer to boot, you can read the news, type a short document, and get on with your day all in the time your aging desktop takes to boot. And for millions, it’ll be their primary computing device; there’s simply no reason they need email to be more complicated than a couple taps and a device that runs days of normal usage on one charge.

Come to think of it, sounds like preheating your oven versus taping QuickOn 2 on your microwave to warm up your food…

Microwave Oven history from Wikipedia

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Tumblr2WP: Move Your Tumblr Blogs to WordPress the Easy Way

Would you like to move your Tumblr blog to WordPress, but think it’d be to hard to get everything moved over? Not any more! We ran an article a couple months ago about How to Move Your Tumblr Blog to WordPress, but it was still rather complicated. You had to export your site, import it into WordPress, then manually change each of your posts to the new WooTumblog post formats to keep everything working the same as before. If your Tumblr blog had many posts, it could be a daunting task!

Thanks to WooThemes, it’s now incredibly simple to move your Tumblr blog to WordPress. They’ve recently created the Tumblr2WordPress exporter that will export your entire Tumblr site into format that will work great with any Tumblog WooTheme such as Canvas, Crisp, or the new Auld theme. It’ll also work great with any theme customized with the WooTumblog plugin. Here’s what you’ll need to do.

Get Your WordPress Site Ready

First, you’ll need a website with WordPress and a WooTumblog compatible theme setup to import your site. Check out our details on the original post for more info. If you’ve already had the site setup for some time, you’ll need to upgrade your WooTheme to work with the new post formats. Check this support article from WooThemes for more info on upgrading your theme. Once it’s upgraded, you’ll be able to use the new WordPress 3.1 Post Formats for your Tumblog.

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Export Your Tumblr Site With Tumblr2WP

Now, head over to the new Tumblr2WordPress site to get your Tumblr blog exported. Enter your Tumblr blog address; even if you’ve added a custom domain, make sure you use the original yourblog.tumblr.com address. Then, choose your settings; the defaults usually should be fine. Click Export when you’re finished, and save your export file to your computer.

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Finally, go back to your WordPress blog and import your posts as your would from any other blog. After a few moments, your Tumblr posts should all be in your WordPress blog, with the correct post formats and all of your content, just as your Tumblr blog was before.

sshot-2011-02-25-[4]

That’s a ton easier than the other method! Thanks to WooThemes, you can now move your Tumblr blog to WordPress much easier than before. So why wait? Move over today and take advantage of all of WordPress’ advantages without losing any of your content you’ve added to Tumblr!

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