Sillybean

July 21, 2008

Essential WordPress plugins

I’ve set up a lot of new WordPress sites lately, and I’ve come up with my own homebrew installation package. All but one of these are admin tools; I don’t have a standard list of theme additions because every site is so different.

  • Akismet is the only spam blocker I’ve ever needed with WordPress.
  • Manageable is very new, but already indispensable. It adds inline editing to the post/page management screens — you double-click a row in the table, and you can edit just about everything but the content.
  • Dashboard Widget Manager lets you turn off dashboard widgets you don’t want and add new ones. (Did you know the Dashboard is wigetized as of 2.5? There just isn’t a built-in manager for it yet.) There aren’t many dashboard-specific widgets available, unfortunately. I’ve learned how to write them, though!
  • Database Backup because things will always go wrong.
  • Search and Replace is very handy when you’re moving a blog from one domain to another. Since WordPress inserts full URLs when you upload media to a post, you end up with a lot of URLs to change.
  • Ozh’s Admin Drop-Down Menus let you move around the admin screens SO much faster.
  • My Page Order gives you a drag-and-drop interface for rearranging pages.
  • No Self Pings prevents WP from pinging itself when you refer to one of your own posts.
  • Clean Notifications sends out uncluttered, HTML-formatted notification emails for things like comment approvals and so forth. These message are much easier to scan than the default plain-text messages WP sends out.
  • Subscribe to Comments because really, how often do you remember to check that thread you posted to last week?
  • (Added later) Category Selector Back to the Sidebar fixes the most egregious usability problem introduced in the WP 2.5 interface, and puts the category checkboxes back above the fold.

For clients’ sites that use a page as the home page (rather than blog posts), I throw in No Place Like Home. In fact, I wrote that for a client whose home page had to have the same name as another page on her site; we both kept forgetting which was which!

What else do you suggest?

Comments

  1. I’m still running 2.1. Everything works fine. Is there a compelling reason for me to upgrade?

    Posted by Scott Janssens on July 22nd, 2008 at 2:03 pm

  2. Gosh, a lot has changed since then. The admin screens now look completely different, and honestly I’m not a fan of the new look; I use Fluency to override it. Widgets are now built in, so you don’t need the plugin. The Dashboard has widgets, as I mentioned above. Pages are now searched as well as posts.

    Oh! Big change: WP now alerts you when there’s an upgrade available, both for the core and for any plugins that are housed on the official directory. That alone is probably worth upgrading for.

    In 2.5, the admin menu wording changed a lot to make more sense — slugs are now known as permalink URLs, options are settings, etc. My favorite feature in 2.6 (other than the dramatically faster Dashboard widgets) is the least impressive: a word counter on the Write screen.

    Posted by Stephanie on July 22nd, 2008 at 2:14 pm

  3. I spend almost no time in the dashboard. I write all but my shortest blog posts in Word (although any desktop app would do). I don’t trust web forms not to lose my data. (Can’t wait until Silverlight and the new Flash stuff take over.)

    The one feature I’d like (more for Deb than me) is a nice image uploader. I wrote her a quick and dirty app that uploads the file to our host and gives her a url, but something integrated would be nice.

    Posted by Scott Janssens on July 22nd, 2008 at 2:28 pm

  4. There is a media uploader included as of 2.5. It’s Flash-based, and some people had trouble with it, so in 2.6 you have the option of going back to the standard browser-based thing. Either way, you then get a media manager window that you can use to edit title, description, and link, and then insert into the post.

    Posted by Stephanie on July 22nd, 2008 at 2:39 pm

  5. Forgot to mention… WP autosaves drafts now, so there’s less of the data loss problem when writing in the web form.

    Posted by Stephanie on July 22nd, 2008 at 2:40 pm

  6. Glad you find Manageable useful!

    Posted by Aaron on July 24th, 2008 at 4:15 pm

  7. Aaron, I ADORE it. Which reminds me, do you have a donation account somewhere? I’d be more than happy to kick some cash your way.

    Good luck in the plugin contest!

    Posted by Stephanie on July 24th, 2008 at 4:22 pm

  8. Thanks Stephanie! A link to donate is in the FYI box on the right here: http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/manageable/. I appreciate your support!

    Posted by Aaron on July 24th, 2008 at 4:24 pm

  9. I still like Brian’s Threaded Comments and Comment Quicktags. I recently dropped the MiniMeta widget because I used a separate widget for the RSS link, I access the admin screen directly from the address bar, and there’s no need for anyone else to log in.

    Posted by Preston on July 24th, 2008 at 4:28 pm

  10. ... some days I should just stay in bed. I was looking for it on your site. Duh!

    Posted by Stephanie on July 24th, 2008 at 4:29 pm

  11. i guess it’d be smart of me to have a link on my site as well =)

    Posted by Aaron on July 25th, 2008 at 3:14 pm

  12. Have you tried one-click installer? It makes life much easier then installing new plugins and themes?

    Posted by MCSE angie on August 11th, 2008 at 12:32 pm

  13. Yes, I just discovered it. It’s great! (linky)

    Posted by Stephanie on August 12th, 2008 at 9:37 am

  14. Thanks, no idea why I wasn’t using the Dashboard Widget Manager.

    Posted by Jeff Bayer on August 24th, 2008 at 3:06 pm

  15. I recommend CommentLuv, which tries to reward commenters with links back to their blogs. I think that non-spam commenters should be rewarded for their efforts. There is also a plugin that, Seth Godin style, notes when a poster is new to the site and sends them a short ‘thank you’ for posting, even if they don’t have a blog for CommentLuv to query.

    Posted by Bill Canaday on September 21st, 2008 at 8:58 pm

  16. one great plugin is the yigg it plugin. so don´t forget to add this plugin in this nice post about wordpress plugins. the yigg it plugin helps your article to get posted on yigg – and get´s by this way interested users. Bye, Peter

    Posted by peter - werbeagentur dreamland on September 27th, 2008 at 12:12 pm

  17. Akismet has been a pretty good utility for filtering out spam. I use it on several different blogs and it has done well at filtering real comments from spam ones. Overall the new wordpress has been working well.

    Posted by platform bed phil on October 5th, 2008 at 8:54 pm

  18. good article, very useful.

    Posted by Kevin W. on October 13th, 2008 at 11:49 pm

  19. Literature is news that stays news.

    Posted by how to make fast money on October 14th, 2008 at 10:36 am

  20. I just released a plugin for Wordpress called Business Directory for Wordpress. It allows you to create a yellow-pages style directory on your blog based on user input. Pretty easy and very handy for SEO. Check it out. http://businessdirectory.squarecompass.com/

    Posted by Cary Snowden on October 21st, 2008 at 1:06 pm

  21. Thank you very much for the resources. I love WordPress!

    Posted by diseno.web.vizcaya on October 26th, 2008 at 2:24 pm

  22. All in one seo and google xml sitemaps are also excellent plugins.

    Posted by Dirty Blue Widgets on November 10th, 2008 at 2:23 pm

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