WPDude not only impressed me with his considerable technical prowess, but also with his integrity and commitment. He really is a pleasure to work with.
Continue Reading »WPDude not only impressed me with his considerable technical prowess, but also with his integrity and commitment. He really is a pleasure to work with.
Continue Reading »Thank you for making this such an easy experience to move to WordPress from TypePad. I found it much easier for you to get me going for a small fee than spend hours trying to go through the WordPress codex.
Continue Reading »A couple of weeks ago, I was at my wits end. My blog posts were not showing up in Firefox and I needed help, more than you can imagine. None of the tech people that I know good provide me real assistance so, I used my good friend Google. I found WordPress Dude, Neil Matthews. [...]
Continue Reading »Neil, I just wanted to say thanks for going above and beyond my expectations with our wordpress consultation the other day. You not only fixed my screw ups, but you also showed me where I was going wrong and how to properly operate the new blog template on a day-to day basis, as well as [...]
Continue Reading »I must say that Neil AKA WP Dude is customer service oriented and commited to building a strong and honorable relationship with his clients. I’m far from tech savy and was in need of assistance with updating my version of word press. WP Dude went above and beyond the necessary, by updating all of my [...]
Continue Reading »After spending 3 months setting up my new site I was stuck on the last details to get the site up and running. I was thrilled to find Neil Matthews who took care of the technical stuff to make my site work better so I did not have to spend another 3 months learning things [...]
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I was griping the other day on Twitter that the default spell checker that comes with WordPress throws a typo up for each instance of WordPress I type, this irony was not lost on me.
When I shake my fist at the universe and have a good old grump on Twitter, I usually find someone who will tell me a solution, this time I was not disappointed.
I have found a replacement for the standard visual editor spell checker, and this is called After The DeadLine. The name comes from a review process the Times runs which picks up and highlights typos, grammatical errors and style errors which have gone to print, the deadline has gone, so the errors were published.
After the deadline has been acquired recently by Automattic the lovely people who wrote WordPress, so you know it is going to be good. I’m reading between the lines here, but I guess they saw the need for a better spell check solution.
You are not going to cough up your hard-earned money to buy a solution if it is not up to par.
After the deadline is a spell check and plugin for WordPress with a little more added on, it also has a grammar checker and a style guide.
You are probably familiar with spell checkers and grammar checkers, but style guide for those of you who have not studied journalism is a standard style of writing something so it is consistent across your publication. For example if you date style if October 21st, an incorrect style would be 21st of October.
You can download After The Deadline here http://afterthedeadline.com/
Installation is a standard affair, upload th plugin to your wp-content directory and activate it. The plugin requires an API key, this is where I cam a little unstuck. I presumed since it was an Automattic plugin it would be the usual API key I use for Akismet and WordPress.com stats, but no it is a separate api that you need to register at afterthedeadline.com to retrieve.
Come on Automattic, how you make my life difficult, I am of course joking,I am sure this will be transitioned in due course, this is a fairly new acquisition for Automattic.
The plugin is a direct replacement for the existing spell checker and is activated from the visual editor by clicking on the spell check icon
The plugin will underline the perceived errors, red for typos, green for grammar and blue for style issues.
Clicking on teh highlighted word or phrase provides a drop down of suggested replacements, standard fare for a spellchecker.
I really like this replacement spell checker, it has a slicker interface, and a bigger database of words. As an Englishman, is appears to cater for my spelling style (s instead of z in words like utilise) and the style guide will help to keep my “blog voice” standardised.
Using After the deadline is more like the spellchecker of a word processors than an after thought to the visual editor. Check it out you will not be disappointed.
Here are some of the other excellent plugins supplied by Automattic
It doesn’t pick up accidental plurals or “teh”, though?
[Reply]
Neil Matthews Reply:
December 7th, 2009 at 7:57 pm
Touche!
I wouldn’t blame the plugin rather the operators inability to click on the spell check icon.
[Reply]
Just so you know, I love your writing style. This is one of the more fun AtD reviews I’ve read.
I just wanted to respond to one thing:
“”"The plugin requires an API key, this is where I cam a little unstuck. I presumed since it was an Automattic plugin it would be the usual API key I use for Akismet and WordPress.com stats, but no it is a separate api that you need to register at afterthedeadline.com to retrieve”"”
You’re not the only one to get bit by this. I’m working on an update to the plugin that will check if your key is not formatted as an AtD key and warn you about this situation. AtD’s key has a different length than the WP.com key.
Thanks again for taking the time to write about AtD. I hope it helps.
– Raphael
[Reply]
Neil Matthews Reply:
December 9th, 2009 at 3:49 pm
Thanks Rapael lets be the mutual appreciation society, I love your plugin
[Reply]
+1 for writing style
[Reply]