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  • Shanora

    (@shanoranetworks)

    I use Firefox. Right click and inspect element. I noticed that the other images were referenced in the css, so in the style editor tab, I did a ctrl-F and searched for bg08 in the css files until I got a hit.

    It’s a great tool. If you haven’t used it before, play with it a bit – it’s extremely useful. Chrome also has similar features.

    Shanora

    (@shanoranetworks)

    Looks like a caching issue. It looks good on my end. Try F5 or Ctrl-R. I have a green lock.

    Shanora

    (@shanoranetworks)

    Sorry about that.

    It looks like you can find the reference in options.css line 129.

    Shanora

    (@shanoranetworks)

    Hi!

    It looks like only one image is at issue on the home page (I didn’t check the others):
    https://liposuccion-susmedicos.com/wp-content/themes/clockwork/images/bg/bg08.png

    Since you say you cannot find the link, above is the path. However, the image should be in your media library, where you can update the url.

    In general, you may need to go into your media library and manually change any url that did is not https. If you are using a builder, they often don’t update when you switch to https. If this is the case you may also need to go into each page and change the urls. Where to edit depends on the builder.

    Shanora

    (@shanoranetworks)

    I like to use All-in-One WP Migration. It is pretty simple to use and has search/replace, if needed. Remember to put it on both sites and run/download the backups for both before moving. This also backs-up the DB, so no extra step.

    Shanora

    (@shanoranetworks)

    The first thing I do is run a reputation check on a site, before going to any site on a forum. It doesn’t tell me why, but your site gave a warning. If you are not trying to infect people, then you need to take care of that. It could be from a security issue, from poor conduct of a previous owner, hacking, etc.

    Otherwise, I just ran your site through GT, Pingdom, and Google page speed analyzer. I was unable to get any data from Google, and it took several tries on the other two.

    There is a waterfall feature on GT that shows where your site is slow (hover on the longest line). In your case it happens to be in server response. On my particular evaluation, it shows your site waiting for a server response for 49s, which points to an issue on your server. If you have a shared hosting plan, you may be sharing the server resources with many other sites, which can vary your site speed throughout the day. You also may have added a plugin that doesn’t play well with others.

    I’m not sure what to tell you about the additional user. You should check with Bluehost → it may be something they did to troubleshoot. My first thought, though, was “hacked.”

    I have previously tried Bluehost, I did not have a problem with the front end, but the back end was always slow. I recommend SiteGround to all of my clients. Most of my clients sites load in under 3s, if using SiteGround.

    • This reply was modified 6 years, 6 months ago by Shanora.
Viewing 6 replies - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)