Ada yang mencoba masuk dengan alamat email ini, tetapi tidak ada Supercell ID yang ditautkan dengan alamat email ini. Kamu bisa membuat Supercell ID baru dengan alamat email ini atau masuk dengan email lain.
Ada yang mencoba masuk dengan alamat email ini, tetapi tidak ada Supercell ID yang ditautkan dengan alamat email ini. Kamu bisa membuat Supercell ID baru dengan alamat email ini atau masuk dengan email lain.
Email ini dikirimkan karena kamu meminta untuk masuk ke Supercell ID milikmu. Jika kamu tidak meminta untuk masuk, abaikan email ini.
Chris Runnells posted: " We're pleased to announce that Twenty Nineteen — the new WordPress default theme designed by Allan Cole and Kjell Reigstad — is available to all WordPress.com sites. Twenty Nineteen was designed with simple but sophisticated typography and a pared"
We're pleased to announce that Twenty Nineteen — the new WordPress default theme designed by Allan Cole and Kjell Reigstad — is available to all WordPress.com sites.
Twenty Nineteen was designed with simple but sophisticated typography and a pared-down, open aesthetic, making it a great foundation for a variety of websites. It also fully supports the new WordPress Editor, which allows you to create a wide range of content for your site.
Twenty Nineteen gives your featured images a bold treatment on posts and pages: the images cover the full width and height of the screen, along with a color overlay which can be changed in the Customizer.
Learn more about WordPress's latest default theme here, or check out the demo site!
I was checking a resource about "AMP" you shared on your page here: funandfuntastic.blogspot.com/2016/02/new-post-faster-mobile-web-for-all.html
While it made everything clear, I actually needed a tool that would report errors on my sites. After some googling, I found one, so I wanted to suggest you add this tool to your page which discusses this topic.
Tyler posted: " The ability to load a previous version of a page or post is invaluable when you need to make a quick correction or compare your current revision to earlier ones. What about viewing your content's revision history on the go? This can be a real life-saver"
The ability to load a previous version of a page or post is invaluable when you need to make a quick correction or compare your current revision to earlier ones. What about viewing your content's revision history on the go? This can be a real life-saver, as we're not always at our desktops. Well, we're thrilled to announce that you can now review your content's history and load revisions for both pages and posts directly from the WordPress mobile apps.
View History
The revision history of every page or post you've worked on is available right from the editor. Just tap My Sites → Site Pages or Blog Posts → any page or post → three-dots button → History.
The history list shows you the time each revision was created (organized by date), the author of the revision, as well as the number of additions and deletions for each revision. To view the content of each revision, tap it on the list.
Load Revision
If you'd like to continue working on an earlier version of your page or post, tap the Load button while viewing the content of a revision. You can view the content in either HTML or a visual format -- just tap the three-dot menu and select HTML preview or Visual preview, respectively.
Send Feedback
The WordPress mobile apps are free and available for both Android and iOS devices. If you have any questions or feedback, reach out to our support team directly from the app -- tap Me → Help & Support → Contact Us. If you're a developer and would like to contribute to the project, learn how you can get involved.
Del Putnam posted: " Over the last thirteen years or so, the number of sites on WordPress.com has grown -- a lot. Every one of those sites gets a unique wordpress.com address. And since there are millions of sites created each year, it means the address you'd like isn't"
Over the last thirteen years or so, the number of sites on WordPress.com has grown -- a lot. Every one of those sites gets a unique wordpress.com address. And since there are millions of sites created each year, it means the address you'd like isn't always available.
Today, a whole new range of possibility opens up: free .blog subdomains.
What's a subdomain?
Glad you asked! This site's address is is blog.wordpress.com. Here, wordpress.com is the domain and blog is the subdomain.
Say your name is Molly and you're starting a food blog. The domain mollysfoodblog.wordpress.com -- that is, the subdomain "mollysfoodblog" on wordpress.com -- is already taken by someone. Or you're starting a website to offer tech advice; but there's already a site using techadvice.wordpress.com, drat!
Now you have more options: you can choose to use a free subdomain with a .blog address, like mollys.food.blog or advice.tech.blog. There's a list of popular .blog domains we've reserved just for this:
art.blog
business.blog
car.blog
code.blog
data.blog
design.blog
family.blog
fashion.blog
finance.blog
fitness.blog
food.blog
game.blog
health.blog
home.blog
law.blog
movie.blog
music.blog
news.blog
photo.blog
poetry.blog
politics.blog
school.blog
science.blog
sport.blog
tech.blog
travel.blog
video.blog
water.blog
These .blog subdomains work just like the regular wordpress.com subdomains -- they don't expire, they're free to use for the lifetime of your site, and you can always replace them with a custom domain at any time.
How do I get one?
First, create your new site. In the first step of signup, we'll ask you about your goal for your site -- select only the "Share ideas, experiences, updates, reviews, stories, videos, or photos" option. In our experience, the people who select this option generally find that a .blog subdomain fits their site well. Fill out the other fields as well, and click Continue.
Now, in the next step when searching for a site address, you'll see a free option at the top of the list. We'll suggest a .blog subdomain related to the terms you entered in the first step. For example, if you searched for "Tech Advice," we might suggest advice.tech.blog as an address for your site.
Click Select next to the address you choose, and you're all set,
Your new website and its perfect address are only a few clicks away. If you start a new site with a .blog subdomain, let us know in the comments! We'd love see what you create.
Deborah Beckett posted: "Automattic wants to build a new web, and a new type of workplace. We want to deliver world-class 24/7 support to our users, and an innovative, exciting, and healthy work environment for our staff worldwide. As a part of this, we recruit from all timezon"
Automattic wants to build a new web, and a new type of workplace. We want to deliver world-class 24/7 support to our users, and an innovative, exciting, and healthy work environment for our staff worldwide. As a part of this, we recruit from all timezones so that everyone has the freedom to choose their own work hours.
In Happiness in particular, we want to provide better support coverage in the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region, and our APAC recruiting efforts have included everything from advertising on social media and job boards to in-person networking at WordCamps and WordPress Meetups.
While we've hired some great Happiness Engineers, we discovered that the ratio of women applicants was dropping over time. As awareness of Automattic as a distributed employer has grown in the region, the number of applications from men has grown faster than those from women.
Given Automattic's commitment to fostering diversity and inclusion, we brainstormed ways to reach women more effectively. This turned into a series of workshops on WooCommerce held for women in India and Singapore throughout 2018.
In 2019 we'll take our message to a broader audience by offering an online workshop. This will let us reach women in many more countries and cities than we could ever visit in a calendar year. We're partnering with Support Driven, an online community of support professionals, to promote support as a career for women who may have the relevant skills but haven't applied for these roles.
In January 2019 we'll launch the first online workshop for women in APAC focused on developing skills in WordPress support. The course will cover:
Nate Heagy posted: "Starting a new website is always exciting: you've chosen a topic, found the right name, and started building it on WordPress.com. Now you may be asking yourself, "What's next?" Well, when you create a site on the WordPress for Android or WordPress for iO"
Starting a new website is always exciting: you've chosen a topic, found the right name, and started building it on WordPress.com.
Now you may be asking yourself, "What's next?" Well, when you create a site on the WordPress for Android or WordPress for iOS mobile apps, the answer will became a lot easier with the introduction of Quick Start, a new tool that guides you through the setup process.
How Quick Start works
After you create a new site on your WordPress app, you'll see a prompt asking if you want some assistance setting it up. Tap Yes! and you'll find Quick Start: a short list of to-do items that will set you on the path to success.
With Quick Start, you'll be able to…
View your site from within the apps.
Select a new theme.
Customize your site.
Create a new blog post.
Set up your sharing preferences.
Follow new sites in the WordPress.com Reader.
These are all tasks that will help you start on the right foot. Exploring these options won't take very long, but once you've gone through the list you'll have a website ready to welcome its first visitors — and all the pieces in place for future growth and success.
Available now
Quick Start is part of the WordPress for Android app (version 10.8 or higher) and WordPress for iOS (version 11.1). If you've got an iPhone, iPad, or Android device and have been thinking of launching a new site, this is the time to take the plunge!