Category: News

  • Hello world!

    Take control of your ITAs this website is aimed at the geeky – techie side of what we do, we figured the “Hello world” title was actually quite fitting, so we’ve left it.

    Here at Work we’re really happy to be relaunching our support website, as it brings out the inner geek in us all that has been so desperate to resurface but hasn’t previously had anywhere to call home.

    We all come from a basic IT Support background, but as the web was taking shape in the late 90’s we all started to shift towards the web and ended up getting jobs that hinged around it. We never forgot our roots though, and we’re all those people who, when at family get-togethers, are the ones left sorting Aunt Traceys iPhone or explaining to Uncle Steve how the internet works.

    So its with great pleasure that we’re able to announce that we are relaunching Work Support as a new service from Work and aimed at offering small to medium businesses with 1 to 10 users award winning IT support and assistance.

    If you are a small business and would like IT peace of mind from as little as £25 + VAT per month, then what are you waiting for?

  • PCI Compliance Nonsense

    OK – I’ve had about enough of this and I need to rant somewhere!!

    As everyone knows – we make websites and quite recently we have been building  lots and lots of online shops. Its usually much more of a technical job as there are so many more elements to take into consideration, one being payments and how you take them via/on your website.

    There are generally three ways you can take payments, and they are as follows;

    1) Simple “cash holding” payment gateways like PayPal – this takes the money and holds it in your paypal account – not a merchant account.

    2) Similar 3rd party payment gateways like SagePay – these are tied to a merchant account which is a bank account specifically for website payments.

    3) Embedded payment gateways that never take anyone from your site, process the payment on your site and sends money to a merchant account.

    Now all apart from the 3rd (in my professional opinion) do not require any level of pci compliance, as the payment isnt taken on the customer website – its taken on PayPal.com or SagePay.com – who then need to be PCI compliant as thats the point of it all..

    Q: What is PCI?

    A: The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) is a set of requirements designed to ensure that ALL companies that process, store or transmit credit card information maintain a secure environment.

    ~Source

    Now somewhere along the line some idiot at the top of the ladder in the financial industry has decided that everyone who owns a merchant account (which are never and could never be hosted on our clients hosting environment, so again, hosted with a 3rd party) needs to be PCI compliant – what a load of rubbish!

    I agree 100% that if you take/store/send payment info you need to tick every box in terms of compliance – as you are dealing with highly sensitive information –  but why do my clients need to become PCI compliant if they never see the card/payment details themselves?

    What the fools at the banks don’t realise is that by them making a stupid call like this (like the cookie thing a few years ago) they are forcing thousands and thousands of small to large sized businesses to unnecessarily pay to have their hosting environments PCI compliant – when they don’t need to!

    Additionally, many customers with shared hosting might need to move their site to a dedicated server or VPS at a significantly higher cost to themselves – as some PCI scanners say that shared hosting can never be PCI compliant – its an area of much confusion & myth and really needs properly clearing up by someone who knows what they are talking about, not just some suit making a blind call with nothing to back it up.

    Is there anyone out there that can (from a technical point of view, i’m actually able to search Google myself also) explain to me why ANYONE using something like SagePay with an external merchant account needs to be PCI compliant themselves?

    </rant-over>

  • WordPress NextGEN Gallery Shortcodes

    WordPress NextGEN Gallery Shortcodes

    Whenever we build a website using WordPress and the client requests a gallery – we always use NextGEN.

    I can’t fault them for the features it offers, its a fantastic bit of kit – but when it actually comes to the shortcodes to get it to display stuff – NextGEN fail big time.

    So I google it every time, sometimes finding what I want – but most of the time having to piece it together from examples people have put on forums.

    Today,I found a blog that lists many of the Shortcodes – so I thought I’d repeat them so they are easier for people to find! – Thanks InfoPint!

    List of Short Codes for NextGEN Gallery

    Short codes are the piece of text which you add along with you text on your blog post or sidebars. Short codes can also be added inside the theme templates.

    For a slideshow :[ slideshow id=x w=width h=height ]
    For a album : [ album id=x template=extend] or [ album id=x template=compact ]
    For a gallery : [  nggallery id=x ]
    For a single picture : [ singlepic id=x w=width h=height mode=web20|watermark float=left|right ]
    For a image browser : [ imagebrowse r id=x ]
    To show image sorted by tags :[ nggtags gallery=mytag,wordpress,…  ]
    To show tag albums : [ nggtags album=mytag,wordpress,…  ]

    Create Special Effects using Short Codes  in the template files

    Short codes can be called from any theme template files, using  do_shortcode template tag   from the template files. Here are some examples

    <?php echo do_shortcode(’[ slideshow id=2 ]); ?>

    You can use this technique to create special flash headers with rotating images or create a showcase effect like here www.StyleHaute.com

    Display Gallery view

    http://nextgen-gallery.com/templates/galleryview/

    [ nggallery id=1 template=galleryview images=0 ]

    Useful Links for NextGEN Gallery

    http://nextgen-gallery.com/custom-fields/

    http://wordpress.org/support/topic/294912

    http://www.visser.com.au/blog/list-of-wordpress-plugins-addons-for-nextgen-gallery/

    http://speckyboy.com/2008/10/23/10-powerful-shoppingecommerce-plugin-solutions-for-wordpress/

    http://www.webdesignerwall.com/tutorials/css-decorative-gallery/

    If you can think of any more shortcodes – or if NextGEN include any more in future releases then please comment.

  • Google buys its way out of another pickle – Gmail.co.uk

    I was trying to think back to when i started using Gmail for the first time – I have quite a good account name,  I got it back when you had to be invited to use the system.

    I love how Gmail has changed the way i use email, I love how I can bolt on “labs” stuff which pushes my email forward in ways other email clients only wished they could evolve (Mail Beer Goggles?? Haha!)

    Anyway – when it was launched in the UK, it was called Gmail – but as its proper launch got closer another company who had been using the term Gmail in the UK for years piped up and kicked up a bit of a fuss about it. A big lawsuit kicked off, and google ended up changing all UK sign ups to @googlemail.com email account – despite @gmail.com still working for all UK users as well.

    They soon resolved it by simply acquiring the .co.uk variant, and the UK signups reverted back to gmail.com.

    Its a strange ‘ol world.