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tanandaplugins for blog maintenance
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21 Feb 07
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Future Posts Calendar Plugin provides a calendar on the Write Post panel to show you when you have upcoming posts, and when you don’t. If you work with future posts a lot, this will help you determine how many posts you have coming out on which day, and which days you have none, so you can fill in the blank.
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WP ServerInfo Plugin provides information about your blog’s server on your Administration Panels, including versions of MySQL, PHP, and phpMyAdmin that related to WordPress. It makes no changes to your database, just provides information.
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Diagnosis WordPress Plugin adds a subpanel to the WordPress Administration Panels so the administrator can look under the hood at the technical information about the WordPress installation, server information, and other technical goodies.
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WordPress Cache Inspect let’s you monitor your WordPress cache and clear it manually if it needs it.
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Role Manager, originally by David House and Owen Winkler and now managed by Im Web Gefunden, is a great way of controlling the level of access users, contributors, and editors have on your WordPress blog. You can customize the different levels of access for each user, allowing them to see only what you want them to see, as well as edit only what they are permitted to edit.
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Clutter Free lets you hide portions of the WordPress posting interface that you rarely (or never) use. Instead of being minimized (and still taking up room), they’ll be completely invisible. Clutter Free completely removes out the Post Preview, i.e. it doesn’t just hide it and so you save a good deal of bandwidth and loading time. If you are using the WYSIWYG editor then it works wonders because the editor only loads once the entire page is loaded.
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Page Links To WordPress Plugin is another 301 or 302 Redirect Plugin to help manage URLs when you move things around.
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Permalinks Migration adds an Admin Panel for redirecting URLs from old addresses to new ones when you change your permalink structure or a post slug name.
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Download Counter also tracks the number of downloads from your blog through an Admin panel.
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phpMyAdmin WordPress Plugin is a favorite of mine. It allows access to your WordPress Database through phpMyAdmin from within your WordPress Admin Panels.
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Update Manager WordPress Plugin helps you keep your plugins updated. Going down the Plugin list to click every Plugin author’s page to look for updates is a pain. Update Manager checks in with the WP-Plugins.net database for any new updates or information related to the Plugins you have installed on your blog.
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The WordPress Installer - The Plugin by Matt Read, which I reviewed last year, is a must-have WordPress Plugin. The WordPress Installer connects with WP-Plugins.net to help you find, install, and manage your WordPress Plugins. Not all WordPress Plugins are designed to interact with the WordPress Plugin Installer, but many new ones do.
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If all else fails, make sure you have a good 404 Page Not Found Error, such as the Dunstan Style Error Page WordPress Plugin. It adds a 404 page error page similar to the one by Dustan Orchard with a lot of options to help the lost visitor. That error page is one of the best I’ve seen in a while.
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WP-Outage WordPress Plugin and Site Unavailable WordPress Plugin include setting the amount of time the site will be done and gives Administrators a chance to see the message or see the site as normal when the site is unavailable. Also check out Site Maintenance WordPress Plugin.
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Under Maintenance WordPress Plugin makes your blog temporarily unavailable with an easy-to-customize message, alerting visitors who may be worried.
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The number one tool for backing up your blog is the WordPress Database Backup Plugin. The newest version backs up your database with an option to backup automatically, on a schedule of your choice. You can set it to backup hourly, daily, or weekly. Backups can be automatically emailed to you, too. And it works with WordPress 2.1.
This doesn’t cover backing up your WordPress Theme and Plugins, and any changes you make to your WordPress setup. That you still have to do yourself. See Backing Up WordPress for details on how to do this.
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