Archive for February, 2009

Feb 15 2009

WordPress plugin upgrade explained

Published by Eric under Blogs & People, Internet, Linux

WordPress logoWordPress 2.7 offers the ability to automatically upgrade plugins as they are released. No more downloading and FTP’ing.

My first experience upgrading a plugin was one of those head scratching moments. I clicked the “upgrade automatically” link and was presented a form asking for connection information.

What sort of connection information? To the plugin developer’s web site or WordPress.org? What user account? There is no documentation at WordPress.org for this feature and the forum posts were of little help.

The obvious solution was the last I tried; you must enter the information for your hosting platform where WordPress lives.

Hostname
myblog.com
Username
myblogadmin (try your hosting admin user account which should be the same as your FTP account for up/downloading of files to your web site)
Password
Password for the preceding user account
Connection Type
Normal (unsecured) FTP or Secure FTP

Behind the scenes WordPress will create a temporary folder inside of wp-content called upgrade.

If you are having trouble with downloading, unpacking, or installing the plugin you’ll need to look at file ownership and/or permissions on your web host. Chris Abernethy provides some helpful insight.

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Feb 11 2009

RED’s 2K in real-time = we need a bigger boat

Published by Eric under Final Cut Pro, Macintosh

RED digital cinemaAt the beginning of the shoot for Bedrooms we ran tests to determine if we could use RED’s latest drivers for Final Cut Pro and 2K raw media (R3D). RED’s whitepaper was optimistic and we felt our 8-core Mac Pro with RAID would suffice. Not so.

We could not get smooth playback regardless of the RT setting, killing background processes, etc. With the help of Leo at Local Hero Post we determined the bottleneck: GPU.

The stock GeForce, while a nice dual-head DVI, can’t keep up with raw 2K. Our options were clear – Quadro FX or Kona video card – and neither within our budget.

We chose the medium proxy file (at 1K) with the intention of conforming later via Crimson or whatever tool at our disposal.

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