How To Install WordPress with LAMP on Ubuntu 18.04? ☞ http://on.geeklearn.net/105edd9a64 #WordPress #LAMP #Ubuntu
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How To Install WordPress with LAMP on Ubuntu 18.04? ☞ http://on.geeklearn.net/105edd9a64 #WordPress #LAMP #Ubuntu
How to Make a Website - 4 Steps
How to Make a Website – 4 Steps
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When starting out to make website for the very first time it’s handy to have a basic check list of what you need to do and in what order to do them. When you’re new to this stuff looking at all the things you have to accomplish can seem like a lot at first. Just take them one at a time and you’ll be off and rolling before you know it.
Step 1 – Get a Domain Name
Come up with a few different…
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Best Plugins to Install in a WordPress Blog
Best Plugins to Install in a WordPress Blog
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When it is about blogging, whether personal or corporate, WordPress is a highly preferred publishing platform today. Its popularity can be primarily attributed to its extremely user-friendly functionalities that make it easier to work even for beginners. This platform offers a wide range of plugins that make the task even easier and hassle free. These plugins allow to get the most out of a…
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So, You Want a WordPress Site? Here’s the Real Stuff Nobody Tells You
Look, I’ve been messing around with WordPress for a long time. I’ve broken sites, I’ve stayed up until 3 AM crying over a white screen of death, and I’ve wasted way too much money on "premium" tools that turned out to be total junk. If you’re just starting out or trying to get your blog to actually look decent, you probably feel like you’re drowning in a sea of tutorials and "top 10" lists.
Most of those lists are just trying to sell you something. I’m not. I’m just a regular person who’s tired of seeing people make the same mistakes I did. So, let’s talk about the real deal with WordPress—the stuff that actually matters if you want a site that doesn’t run like a turtle in a jar of molasses.
The "Fancy Theme" Trap
First things first: the theme. This is where everyone spends their first week. You go to those big marketplace sites, you see a theme that looks like a million bucks with cool animations and 50 different homepages, and you think, "Yep, that’s the one."
Stop right there.
Most of those "all-in-one" themes are a nightmare. They come with what we call "bloat." It’s like buying a Swiss Army knife that has 100 tools on it, but 98 of them are rusty and the whole thing is too heavy to carry in your pocket. These themes have so much extra code for features you’ll never use, and that code makes your site slow. And in the Google world, slow is death.
If I were you, I’d stick to something light. Seriously. Pick a base theme that’s fast and clean. You don’t need a built-in slider or 500 Google fonts. You can add the fancy stuff later. A fast, boring-looking site that people can actually read is a thousand times better than a flashy site that takes ten seconds to load. People have the attention span of a goldfish these days. If your site doesn't pop up instantly, they’re gone.
The Plugin Rabbit Hole
Then there’s the plugins. Oh man, the plugins. It’s so tempting to just install a plugin for every little thing. Want a contact form? Plugin. Want your images to pop? Plugin. Want to change a font? Plugin.
Before you know it, you have 40 plugins running. This is how you break your site. Plugins are like roommates—the more you have, the more likely someone is going to start a fire in the kitchen. They clash with each other. One updates, the other doesn't, and suddenly your whole layout is wonky and you don't know why.
The "Tips and Tools" secret? Keep it lean. You really only need a few essentials:
Something for security (because hackers are annoying).
Something to make your site fast (caching).
A decent SEO tool so people can actually find you on Google.
Maybe a simple contact form.
That’s it. For everything else, ask yourself: "Do I really need this, or am I just being fancy?" Usually, you’re just being fancy.
Let’s Talk About "Page Builders"
You’ve probably heard of Elementor or Divi. They’re "Page Builders." They let you drag and drop stuff to make your site look cool without knowing any code. They’re great for beginners, but they come with a catch.
Once you build your site with one of these, you’re basically married to it. If you decide to switch later, your site will probably turn into a giant mess of "shortcodes" and broken text. It’s a bit of a trap. I’m not saying don’t use them—they’re super helpful if you aren’t a tech wizard—but just know that you’re trading speed and flexibility for ease of use. If you go this route, pick one and stick with it. Don’t try to mix and match.
Hosting: Don’t Be a Cheapskate (But Don’t Overpay Either)
A lot of people go for the cheapest hosting possible—the ones that cost like $2 a month. I get it, we all like a bargain. But you get what you pay for. Cheap hosting is like living in a crowded apartment building with paper-thin walls. If your neighbor gets a lot of traffic, your site slows down. If they get hacked, you might be in trouble too.
You don't need a $100-a-month "enterprise" plan, but don't buy the bottom-of-the-barrel stuff either. Find a middle ground. Look for "Managed WordPress" hosting if you can swing it. It just means the company takes care of the technical boring stuff so you don't have to. It’ll save you a lot of headaches down the road.
The "Backup" Nightmare
Here is a quick story. A friend of mine spent three months writing amazing posts. One day, she clicked "Update" on a plugin, and the whole site just… vanished. Gone. She didn't have a backup. She had to start from scratch. She cried. I almost cried for her.
Don’t be that person. Set up a backup plugin on day one. Make sure it sends your files to Google Drive or Dropbox or somewhere that isn't your own server. It takes five minutes to set up, and it’s the best "tool" you will ever use. Think of it like a seatbelt. You hope you never need it, but you’ll be really glad it’s there when things go sideways.
Images: The Silent Killer
Here’s a tip that most people ignore: stop uploading giant photos straight from your phone or a stock photo site. If you upload a 5MB photo of your cat, it’s going to take forever to load.
Use a tool to shrink your images before you upload them. There are plenty of free ones online. You want your photos to look good, but they don't need to be high-resolution enough to print on a billboard. Keep them small, keep them snappy. Your visitors (and their mobile data plans) will thank you.
What’s the Point of All This?
At the end of the day, WordPress is just a tool. It’s easy to get lost in the "Tools and Tips" and forget why you started the blog in the first place. My biggest tip? Don't aim for perfection. Your site doesn't need to be perfect on day one. It just needs to work.
People spend months tweaking the color of a button or finding the "perfect" font, and they never actually write a single post. Don't fall for that. Get the basics right—a fast theme, a few solid plugins, and a good host—and then just start creating. You can fix the ugly bits later.
I’m going to be sharing more specific tutorials soon—like how to actually set up those "essential" plugins without losing your mind—but for now, just take a breath. WordPress is a bit of a beast, but once you stop overcomplicating it, it’s actually pretty fun to play with.
Quick Checklist for Your First Week:
Keep your login info safe. Don't use "admin" as your username. That’s like leaving your front door key under the mat.
Don't install every plugin you see. If you haven't used it in a week, delete it.
Check your site on your phone. Most people will read your blog on their phone, not a big computer screen. If it looks weird on mobile, it’s broken.
Update stuff. When you see those little red circles in your dashboard, it means things need updating. Do it. It keeps your site safe. (Just make sure you have that backup first!)
Ignore the "Guru" advice. You don't need to spend thousands of dollars to have a good blog. You just need some patience and a bit of common sense.
Anyway, that’s my rant for today. WordPress isn't nearly as scary as people make it out to be, but it's very easy to make it harder than it needs to be. Stick to the simple stuff, focus on your content, and don't let the technical junk get in the way of your ideas.
Catch you in the next one, where we’ll actually dive into some specific "how-to" stuff that won't make your brain explode. Peace.
How to Build a Review Website with WordPress, Elementor & AI in Under an Hour
Build a complete review and comparison website from scratch using WordPress, Elementor Pro, and the Site Nitro Creator Suite plugin — then use AI to generate SEO-optimized reviews, comparisons, roundups, and guides directly from your YouTube video transcripts.
In this video I walk you through spinning up a WordPress site on XCloud, installing and configuring Site Nitro Creator Suite, designing the site with Elementor using AI assistance, and publishing a fully formatted restaurant review — all in about an hour.
https://youtube.com/shorts/5Fivq5rPB7M?feature=share
https://youtu.be/MqZxhUfhJkM
https://youtu.be/gDMXfaavrSY