Herky Fishbine
Forum Replies Created
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UPDATE: SOLVED.
I discovered that removing the image from SEO Settings > Social Meta Settings > Social Image Fallback URL will also remove it from the Archive settings.
- This reply was modified 2 years, 10 months ago by Herky Fishbine.
Hi,
Thanks for the fast reply. By user front end, I mean the public facing side of a wordpress site — not through the wp-admin dashboard.
I see that you have now added a contact email to your about page. I’ll send more details there.
I concur that the upgrade process is frustrating.
There is an auto-download of only one of the necessary files, the rest have to be manually download and installed but there are no instructions to do so. And some of the required files are not included in the pro download bundle.
Files are misnamed (some pdfs identified as zip) and the instructions are poor (they do not comport to the user experience). Documentation is very out of date too.
Still, this is a great plugin once it’s installed and working. Just expect a little back and forth with support for guidance before you can get it installed and configured.
Hey, that’s great, Jeff. Thanks!
Forum: Plugins
In reply to: [Web Push Notifications - Webpushr] Nice! 2 QuestionsHello @armandoarrastia,
With apologies to webpushr.
I only installed the plugin in a test environment. I experimented with what it was like for a restaurant to add menu items and configure. What I saw was encouraging that the plugin is well designed. Since it is free to use, you don’t have anything to lose my giving it a try and seeing if you agree with my assessment.
Forum: Plugins
In reply to: [Web Push Notifications - Webpushr] Nice! 2 QuestionsHello,
Thanks again for your speedy and thorough attention. Very professional.
1. Agreed.
2. That’s a good feature, thanks for bringing it to my attention. This question was prompted by a desire not to overwhelm with notifications on a site that allows user-submitted posts. Disabling default notifications puts control back with the administrator who can then, on individual posts, check “Send Web Push Notification” and update the post, thereby making a notification for that particular post.
That method is a pretty decent substitute for throttling and in some ways better, as it allows an admin to curate notification-worthy posts. It could be made a little more efficient by including the “Send Web Push Notification” checkbox in the post’s Quick Edit options in the admin dashboard, if you were so inclined.
3, 4, 5. Stripe is a perfectly acceptable alternative. Your pricing seems reasonable and clear.
Thank you again.
- This reply was modified 4 years, 4 months ago by Herky Fishbine.
Forum: Plugins
In reply to: [Web Push Notifications - Webpushr] Nice! 2 QuestionsHi,
Thanks for the fast reply.
1. A user will likely not be yet familiar with a site when she first sees the opt-in prompt so, in my opinion, it would be better to have no topics than to ask a user to select topics before knowing what they may include — especially if there is no way to reconfigure later. Locked in topics on subscription would not be desirable.
More important is the ability for admin to throttle number of notifications in a day.
2. Please consider accepting PayPal, for sake of security.
Here is a comment where a user describes a charge he wasn’t expecting:
“After the last update, I can no longer send messages without paying.”
https://www.ads-software.com/support/topic/free-9/
Thank you again.
You can add some custom css to your child theme to make the input field more prominent.
This will get you started:
.woonp label { font-weight: 700; } .woonp-input { display: block; font-size: 18px; font-weight: 700; color: #444; line-height: 1.3; padding: .6em 1em .6em .4em; box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0; border: 1px solid #aaa; background-color: #FFFF00; }
Cool! Glad to have helped.
It seems like it should depend on the recipient’s role, not the senders.
If an admin is receiving the notification, he should be able to see the edit link (convenient to approve posts that are initially submitted as pending), regardless of the submiter’s role.
Yes?
Hi Jeff,
Here is what I found:
The edit link appears in notification emails if the form was submitted by a logged-in administrator.
If the form was submitted by a logged-in non-administrator or a logged-out user, the edit link is not shown in the email.
I hope this helps.
Good to know, and thanks for the fast reply.
Forum: Plugins
In reply to: [AWS for WordPress] Enable local storageSOLVED: Should anybody else find themselves wondering how to solve this, the instruction “Local storage needs to be enabled” is misguided.
The instruction should be “Disable Store audio in Amazon S3.” Once this configuration option is disabled, one can enable media library support.
I suggest Amazon correct this.
- This reply was modified 4 years, 7 months ago by Herky Fishbine.
Thank you. I understand now and, yes, that will work nicely for my purposes. I’ve created an account and look forward to getting some local restaurants onboard.
Hello Georgiana,
Thank you for the reply. I am afraid I did not ask my question precisely (or maybe I am not fully understanding your answer).
It is not only that I want multiple individual restaurants under one site but, and this is what I’m not sure I communicated well, I am wondering if each individual WordPress user on my site can manage her own menu.
In other words, what you describe as available to me as an administrator is ideal in regard to getting shortcodes. But I do not want to manage each restaurant’s menu. I want the users to do that themselves. Can multiple individual users do that themselves on my site?