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 am working with the owners of a blog who provide a news service to a resort island in the southern henisphere, and part of hteir requirements was a weather update on the top of their blog.
This is the first time I have been called upon to do this, so I though I would share my findings with you lot.
There are a number of weather services out there who coallate reports and make them available as web services. This seemed the best bet, plugin to one of these services and use their data.
The eventual service I chose was http://www.accuweather.com/
Once I had selected my weather service, the next step was to either write some code to pull in the data from Accuweather or to find a plugin that did it already. I’m all for not re-inventing the wheel, and I found a number of plugins that used Accuweather. I finally selected wp-forecast http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-forecast/
I chose this because it had the ability to code the weather into the theme through php calls along with widgets. The level of data provided was very good, and it looked great on my clients site.
WP_forecast is a fairly simple thing to use, install it in the normal plugin fashion, then retrieve your location from Accuweather. It will come in a format similar to this:
EUR|UK|UK179|NEWCASTLE|
I simply searched on the homepage for my city, and this code was appended to the end of the URL, a quick cut and paste, and I had weather for cold old Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
There is a lot of data to add from temperature, wind speed and direction, humidity and loads more. A very thorough service.
I installed wp-forecast on my blog and screen captured a view of the widget so you can see what it looks like
Having a weather forecast may not be everyone’s thing, but if your blog is the front end for a bricks and mortar site, where people come and do things (can I be more vague) then this may be for you.