Posted by Steve on Thursday, April 26, 2007, at 11:53 am.Filed under Talkr.Follow any responses to this post with its comments RSS feed.You can post a comment or trackback from your blog.
Paul: Good idea. I was thinking about the same sort of thing myself. I’m thinking about setting options to suppress if the current page is feed.php. Do you think a page-by-page option would be useful? That is, should I add it as an option to the write page and write post forms, too?
What you suggested - adding it as an option on the write page and write post forms - is a great idea and very user friendly.
From the other plugins I have installed (i.e. “share this” which I see you have also), it is common that in the documentation they provide an edit that you can do to turn off the default inclusion, then a bit of code to add to your template file(s) where you want it to appear.
Personally I am okay with either way, though I know many less code savvy (I am not a real coder, but I am sure I can do more than my brother in law - a writer and dedicated blogger that knows nothing of computers) would thank you for your suggestion above.
[...] are available to promote your feed, one is shown at the end of each post on our blog now, thanks to Steve Stern For Creating this Talkr Wordpress Plug-on anyone can simply download the plug in for the wordpress codex, ftp it to their plug ins directory, [...]
[...] integrate these services seamlessly with your Wordpress blog:??Odiago plugin for Wordpress??& Talkr Plugin for Wordpress. I am sure other blogging platforms can easily be supported with little or no [...]
[...] which gives you information on the audio feed usage. Odiogo lacks the stats part. Talkr also has WordPress plugin to embed Talkr feed into every [...]
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Version 1.0 of the Talkr plugin is in the WordPress codex.
Hi Steve - Great plug-in. Just got one question. The plugin shows at the bottom of pages as well as posts.
It is kinda funny to have “Listen to this post” at the bottom of a contact form or a site map :).
Is there a way to supress it or turn off the automatic addition and place some code in my template files myself where I want it?
Paul: Good idea. I was thinking about the same sort of thing myself. I’m thinking about setting options to suppress if the current page is feed.php. Do you think a page-by-page option would be useful? That is, should I add it as an option to the write page and write post forms, too?
What you suggested - adding it as an option on the write page and write post forms - is a great idea and very user friendly.
From the other plugins I have installed (i.e. “share this” which I see you have also), it is common that in the documentation they provide an edit that you can do to turn off the default inclusion, then a bit of code to add to your template file(s) where you want it to appear.
Personally I am okay with either way, though I know many less code savvy (I am not a real coder, but I am sure I can do more than my brother in law - a writer and dedicated blogger that knows nothing of computers) would thank you for your suggestion above.
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[...] are available to promote your feed, one is shown at the end of each post on our blog now, thanks to Steve Stern For Creating this Talkr Wordpress Plug-on anyone can simply download the plug in for the wordpress codex, ftp it to their plug ins directory, [...]
[...] integrate these services seamlessly with your Wordpress blog:??Odiago plugin for Wordpress??& Talkr Plugin for Wordpress. I am sure other blogging platforms can easily be supported with little or no [...]
[...] which gives you information on the audio feed usage. Odiogo lacks the stats part. Talkr also has WordPress plugin to embed Talkr feed into every [...]
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