I have 4 sites that I work on all in Wordpress. The accessibility of editing them depends on what plugins you use. She classic editor is very easy to use and in many cases I simply use lynx and if it is a large Chang pull it to vim and then save it back to lynx press tehe save button on the page and press on. For things that need to be pretty I ask my wife for help as colors and image placement have little meaning for me.
Tom Sent from my iPhone > On Jan 1, 2023, at 18:51, Karen Lewellen <klewel...@shellworld.net> wrote: > > Hi there, > I agree with ease, my personal site is in html, so when I have to change > things like a phone number, I can just use an editor. > However, this site will be new. > dreamhost provides the WordPress tool, but they also just provide regular ftp > for uploading. > If I could find someone willing to do the work, I would just pay them > within, reason. > Everything will be local, as in in my dream host workspace. just desire a > tool, and since WordPress is offered, thought I would ask. > Keeping in mind that I use shellworld, although I do have links for DOS on my > computer, any easy creation tool that is not WordPress then? > Karen > > > >> On Sat, 31 Dec 2022, Tim Chase wrote: >> >>> On 2022-12-30 23:42, Karen Lewellen wrote: >>> While I generally have few issues accessing WordPress created >>> sites, at least the one I have encountered, that does not necessarily >>> translate to the tool itself. >> >> If I understand correctly, I believe you're talking about the >> accessibility of the admin/authoring portions of Wordpress which >> is independent of the accessibility of the resulting site published >> using Wordpress. >> >>> Anyone successfully use WordPress with Lynx? >> >> It's been a while since I've played with an install. If the >> admin/authoring panel isn't accessible from lynx (which might well >> be the case since there was a major shift a while back in the >> content-editor widget, changing from a more straightforward text >> entry box to a rich-edit box), there's "wp-cli" (https://wp-cli.org/) >> utility which lets you manage just about every aspect of a Wordpress >> install from the command-line, including posting and comment >> management. >> >> That said, unless I *have* to use Wordpress for something, I generally >> prefer using a static site generator (SSG) to maintain my personal >> sites. I use a combination of Nikola (https://getnikola.com/) and >> a custom SSG that I wrote for my own uses depending on which site. >> But there are lots of others like Hugo or Jekyll. Big advantages >> include: >> >> - everything is local >> >> - the generation process just creates an "output/" folder that you >> can copy up to your server however you want (whether FTP, rsync, >> scp, or some web GUI) >> >> - there's nothing dynamic on the server that could be exploited/hacked >> since it's all just text files >> >> - the resulting pages are FAST even on a ridiculously underpowered >> VPS instance or shared-hosting box >> >> Anyways, just a collection of my random thoughts & ramblings. >> >> -tim >> >> >> >> >> >