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WordPress 3.3: What’s New for Chiropractors

WordPress 3.3I’m a HUGE fan of WordPress.

Always have been and probably always will be.

This blog, Next Generation Chiropractor, as well as the majority of websites I build for Chiropractic Blog Designs’ customers, runs on a self-hosted version of WordPress built within the amazing Genesis Framework.

If you’re not sure if a self-hosted website is the correct decision for your business, then checkout this wonderful Infographic that explains the difference between a Self-Hosted vs. a free WordPress-hosted website.

If your current website runs on WordPress, make sure you or your webmaster update to the most current version. Not only will this protect your site but will also give you access to their latest goodies.

What goodies am I talking about?

Click the Continue Reading button below to find out. ;-)

Easier Uploading

File Type Detection

They’ve streamlined things!

WordPress Media IconInstead of needing to click on a specific upload icon based on your file type, now there’s just one.

Once your file is uploaded, the appropriate fields will be displayed for entering information based on the file type.

Drag-and-Drop Media Uploader

Drag-and-DropAdding photos or other files to posts and pages just got easier. Drag files from your desktop and drop them into the uploader. Add one file at a time, or many at once.

More File Formats

They’ve added the rar and 7z file formats to the list of allowed file types in the uploader.

Dashboard Design

Flyout Menus

Flyout MenusSpeed up navigating the dashboard and reduce repetitive clicking with their new flyout submenus.

As you hover over each main menu item in your dashboard navigation, the submenus will magically appear, providing single-click access to any dashboard screen.

Header + Admin Bar = Toolbar

To save space and increase efficiency, they’ve combined the admin bar and the old Dashboard header into one persistent toolbar.

Hovering over the toolbar items will reveal submenus when available for quick access.

Responsive Design

Certain dashboard screens have been updated to look better at various sizes, including improved iPad/tablet support.

Help Tabs

Help ScreenThe Help tabs located in the upper corner of the dashboard screens below your name have gotten a facelift. Help content is broken into smaller sections for easier access, with links to relevant documentation and the support forums always visible.

Feels Like the First Time

New Feature Pointers

New Feature PointerWhen they add new features, move navigation, or do anything else with the dashboard that might throw you for a loop when you update your WordPress site, they’ll let you know about it with new feature pointers explaining the change.

Post-update Changelog

From now on when you update WordPress, you’ll be brought to this screen — also accessible any time from the W logo in the corner of the toolbar — to get an overview of what’s changed.

Dashboard Welcome

Welcome ScreenThe dashboard home screen will have a Welcome area that displays when a new WordPress installation is accessed for the first time, prompting the site owner to complete various setup tasks. Once dismissed, this welcome can be accessed via the dashboard home screen options tab.

Content Tools

Better Co-Editing

Have you ever gone to edit a post after someone else has finished with it, only to get an alert that tells you the other person is still editing the post?

Co-editingFrom now on, you’ll only get that alert if another person is still on the editing screen — no more time lag.

Tumblr Importer

Want to import content from Tumblr to WordPress? No problem!

Go to Tools → Import to get the new Tumblr Importer, which maps your Tumblog posts to the matching WordPress post formats.

Tip: Choose a theme designed to display post formats to get the greatest benefit from the importer.

Widget Improvements

Changing themes often requires widget re-configuration based on the number and position of sidebars.

Now if you change back to a previous theme, the widgets will automatically go back to how you had them arranged in that theme.

Note: if you’ve added new widgets since the switch, you’ll need to rescue them from the Inactive Widgets area.

Under the Hood

Flexible Permalinks

You have more freedom when choosing a post permalink structure. Skip the date information or add a category slug without a performance penalty.

Post Slugs: Less Funky

Funky characters in post titles (e.g. curly quotes from a word processor) will no longer result in garbled post slugs.

jQuery and jQuery UI

WordPress now includes the entire jQuery UI stack and the latest version of jQuery: 1.7.1.

is_main_query()

This handy method will tell you if a WP_Query object is the main WordPress query or a secondary query.

WP_Screen API

WordPress has a nice new API for working with admin screens. Create rich screens, add help documentation, adapt to screen contexts, and more.

Editor API Overhaul

The new editor API automatically pulls in all the JS and CSS goodness for the editor. It even supports multiple editors on the same page.

Lots of Goodies Under the Hood!

As you can see, the WordPress community has put a great deal of thought and love into their most recent update.

I, for one, am enjoying it immensenesly.

Question: Have you upgraded yet?

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About Dr. Patrick MacNamara

Patrick MacNamara is an Apple aficionado, chiropractor, professional consultant, social media advocate and expert in web design and development. Learn more about him here and connect with him on Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, Twitter, and YouTube.

Comments

  1. Still new to blogging and have learned tons with WordPress so far. Would love to upgrade to 3.3, but unfortunately can’t figure out how to do it. Am I missing something? Is there an easy way to do it?

    On a side note what do you think about, or do you have an opinion on Alexa.com rankings? Also, would a Google Places page really help search engine rankings?

    Cheers and keep up the awesome work.

  2. Steven Zabronsky, DC says:

    Thanks for the great info on your site. I was curious though. I came across your site while browsing the Headway sites, yet I see here you use Genesis. I was planning to go with Headway and was wondering if one is better than the other.
    Thanks,
    Dr Z

    • Hi, Dr. Zabronsky.

      To answer your question, I wouldn’t say that one is better than the other. They’re both topnotch premium frameworks.

      However, if you’re not very good at coding, I’d recommend Headway. Their drag-and-drop feature is insanely easy to use to get the look you’re looking for.

      With that said, I couldn’t be happier with my current design. The Genesis Framework is an amazing platform and they’re always pushing the bar with each new release of Child Themes they develop.

      Either way you decide, you’ll be pleased.

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