Hi, I'm Aaron Harun, a New York based
Programmer and Web Developer.
You're about to have an "AaHa!" moment.
The WordPress Nav Menu Access Keys Plugin allows you to add access keys to your WordPress Navigation Menus to increase the accessibility of your website. It only works for WP versions 3.0 and higher. Use: Use of this plugin is simple. On the Admin panel when you add a new menu item to the wordpress 3.0 menus, there is a new option along with the title and the url for the item. In this box, add a single-character-long access key to make it much easier for your users to browse your website. Unfortunately, the plugin requires JavaScript in the administration [...]
The site existed before I was brought on to help, but it was missing some major features to transform it into an amazing Indie music source. Jason contacted me to help integrate AJAXed WordPress into his website, so his users could browse articles while listening to streaming music. But we didn’t stop there. Once the first project was finished, Jason hired me again to add an auto-play playlist to his website to give it Pandora-like functionality so his users could listen to related music in the extensive collection of songs. How has it worked for him? Read the testimonial to [...]
I’ve worked with Marios Alexandrou on several different WordPress plugins for his own personal use. Recently, he contacted me to develop a plugin that would alert him to links from websites such as Digg or StumbleUpon. Thus, the Wordrpess Social Media Alerts plugin was born. Features Regex Referrer Matching Clean Code Base Automated Emails Project Images Disclaimer While AaHa Creative was responsible for developing the plugin, I do not provide support for it because I can not guarantee that the source code is the exact same. Please contact Marios directly if you need support with this plugin.
Most bloggers use WordPress’ future posts feature to help keep content flowing. However, they don’t provide a way to quickly and easily see when future posts are scheduled. So if you use future posts a lot, you probably also find yourself looking back and forth from your post list to a calendar or recording your future posts on a calendar to avoid having a double post on a single day and then none for three days. On top of that there are the frequent “How many days are in March again” checks. Well this plugin gets rid of all of [...]
The WordPress Access Keys Plugin allows you to add access keys to pages and categories to improve accessibility of your WordPress website. This works with any page or category list that is called with wp_list pages and wp_list_categories respectively. Works for WP 2.0 – 3.0 Download: Download WordPress Access Keys Installation: Use the one-click installer! Or: Download the zip file, unzip it and upload to your wp-content/plugins folder Upload to your plugin directory. Activate. Go to the Admin Menu under Posts named Access Keys. Read the instructions. The plugin is hosted in the WordPress Extend database so you can also [...]
The main site for the family of websites that serve the New England Region of Phi Theta Kappa, the entire website is built on top of WordPress MU with a fully integrated BB that shares the same database and template files. This deep integration is one of the most valuable features of the website as it allows users to sign up only a single time and allows the forums and website to share the exact same theme files. The entire design and all logos were done in-house. Features Custom widgets. Event plugin integration. Custom page templates to show all past [...]
This WordPress-based website features a selection of custom plugins and a custom theme. Rather than creating a new CMS for the website from the ground up, the client and I decided that the best option was to base the website on WordPress. Using WordPress saved both time and money because it already had many of the features the site needed (user management, articles, categories, pages.) WordPress plugins were then created to handle all of the custom features needed.
Daniel contacted me to bug-fix a partially completed website that was started and abandoned by a large outsourced web developer firm. The website had been passed through several employees within a firm that had an extremely high turnover rate. Even after a year, the website was costing the client huge amounts of money without any benefit. Then I stepped in to help. Phase 1. The original request was to add functionality, modify or correct a few features, and bug fix the website. Unfortunately, the prior developers hadn’t been truthful with the client and many “features” were actually just hard-coded HTML. [...]