jdailey
Forum Replies Created
-
You may have accidentally reviewed the wrong plugin. Hummingbird is not a backup plugin. If you let us know what plugin you were using we can point you in the right direction. 🙂
Thank you for taking the time to write this review Tim! I am really excited about the future of Forminator. The guys knocked it out of the park with this one.:)
Thanks for the very kind review Tony. Glad to hear you see the potential in the API. It’s going to be fun to watch others expand what Forminator can do with the API. Thanks for all the feedback along the way!
Thanks for giving Forminator a play. Payment gateway functionality is already being built along with calculators…and if you are a developer you can build any payment gateway you like with the open API. 🙂 Be sure and follow through on that promise as Forminator is completely free, unbranded and unlimited.
That said…a 1-star review for a feature we did not advertise feels a bit unfair. Looking forward to winning your 5-star approval in the future.
- This reply was modified 7 years, 7 months ago by jdailey.
Thanks for the rating and feedback 🙂 Could you explain a little what you mean by jargon so we can look into improving Hummingbird? Balancing simplicity, clear explanations and advanced features is something we are always looking to improve. We would love to give you a 5-star experience in the future.
Thanks for taking the time to give your rating! Could you give some feedback on how we could make Hummingbird a 5-star experience for you?
Thanks for taking a minute to rate Smush. If you have any specific suggestions that would make Smush a 5-star plugin for you please let us know. We are always looking for ways to improve the experience.
Hi there @flizzywp! Just wanted to let you know we just released an update that uses the new hooks provided in WordPress 4.9.6 for simply updating your sites privacy policy if you are still working on GDPR compliance. As Oguz noted Smush does not store any information, but this update will help with transparency and can be used to easily explain the tool to your end-users. Thank you again for using Smush. 🙂
@salimn just checking in to see if you were able to resolve this issue. Let us know and we will gladly help.
Thank you for trying Custom Sidebars. It appears you never opened a support thread for this issue. We would love to work with you to resolve the conflict as this has never been reported. Our support team is active on the forums. You can open a thread here:
https://wordpress.org/support/plugin/custom-sidebars/
I know we can give you a 5-star experience. 🙂
Thank you for taking time to rate Custom Sidebars! What features would make it a 5-star plugin? We would love the opportunity to help get your site 100% of the way to where you are trying to go.
Forum: Reviews
In reply to: [Custom Sidebars - Dynamic Sidebar Classic Widget Area Manager] Does the job…Thank you for taking the time to rate Custom Sidebars. Could you provide specific areas where we can improve and give you a 5-star experience? Your feedback is valuable to us as we are always looking for ways to make CS better.
@honeyhill Sorry to hear you encountered an error when installing Custom Sidebars. Because we have not have others reporting a similar issue we are unable to provide a patch for your setup without more details. If you are willing to send an error log, URL or other troubleshooting information we will gladly look into the situation.
Forum: Reviews
In reply to: [Gutenberg] Seeing the bigger vision@elwoodp I understand that is the general cause for concern, but to me that is a communication and trust problem not a Gutenberg conversation. I am not aware of a hard deadline for WP5 the deadline is “When Gutenberg is ready”. And yes the word “Ready” is objective.
But based on the 15 year track record of WordPress – the commitment to backwards compatibility and the commitment to accessibility first (not just physical but for people with slow or poor internet connections). Not to mention Gutenberg specific commitments like the fact that in version 5 you will still be able to revert to the old editing experience. You will not be forced to use Gutenberg in version 5. Just based on character and track record alone it wouldn’t make sense to transition 30% of the web to a half-baked, unstable editor overnight.
My point is, a big change like this could be scary, but it doesn’t fit the culture of WordPress to do something big and drastic that could end up starving major sections of the ecosystem without carful planning and a prolonged launch over multiple versions.
In version 5 it may be the default editor but it will not be the only editor. I expect more than anything that version 5 will be a solid famework for continued development. There will be early adaptors but just like with the Customizer it will take time for developers to integrate plugins and themes over to blocks.
I may be proven wrong, but if I am, I will be shocked. If you are correct and a big switch is flipped that instantly forces all users to use Gutenberg overnight, WordPress anarchy will ensue, a major split will take place and a new forked version of WordPress will rise to take its place. That is the beauty of opensource. We can fork it and keep the old editor because the code is democratized. 😀
Sorry to hear you had a poor experience with Hummingbird. Without a support ticket or instructions for assessing the issue we are unable to help improve the settings process for you. While there are some aspects of performance optimization that are effective across all sites, tools like minification are not one-size-fits all. That is why we do not activate and run minification file compression or rearrange files by default and why we provide one click reset. The default settings should not have crashed your site. If that is the case we would love to look further into the situation so we can create a better product. If the issue was caused after making adjustments to minification or any of our other settings our team would like to help troubleshoot the problem.