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How to Install WordPress From Scratch – Video

02-03-2012 07:47 Hosted by author Deltina Hay, this in-depth tutorial demonstrates how to install WordPress on your Website server. Deltina talks in detail about the software needed to install WordPress, how to set up a secure database for WordPress, how to populate the WordPress configuration file, how to establish FTP access to upload WordPress, and, ultimately, how to install WordPress.

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How to Install WordPress From Scratch - Video

Split Testing: Google Website Optimizer with WordPress – Video

02-03-2012 11:02 Full tutorial: OutsourceFactor.com | This video is part of a detailed tutorial on split testing. Google Website Optimizer is a free option but can be very confusing for people using WordPress. We cover how to setup an experiment in Google Website Optimizer, and how to properly paste your code into WordPress.

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Split Testing: Google Website Optimizer with WordPress - Video

Presentation: Facebook Post Planner – WordPress Plugin (by Web Wizards) – Video

02-03-2012 17:17 Presentation of our WordPress Plugin, Facebook Post Planner. If you like the plugin you can buy it from CodeCanyon at codecanyon.net

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Presentation: Facebook Post Planner - WordPress Plugin (by Web Wizards) - Video

Tornado wrecks homes in Ala.; no word if injuries

Posted: Friday, March 2, 2012 11:56 pm | Updated: 2:14 am, Sat Mar 3, 2012.

Powerful storms leveled small towns in southern Indiana, transforming entire blocks of homes into piles of debris, tossing school buses into a home and a restaurant and causing destruction so severe it was difficult to tell what was once there. As night fell, dazed residents shuffled through town, some looking for relatives, while rescue workers searched the rubble for survivors. Without power, the only light in town came from cars that crawled down the streets.

From the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes, the storms touched nearly all walks of life. A fire station was flattened. Roofs were ripped off schools. A prison fence was knocked down and scores of homes and businesses were destroyed. At least 28 people were killed, including 14 in Indiana and 12 in Kentucky, and dozens of others were hurt in the second deadly tornado outbreak this week.

It wasn't immediately clear how many people were missing.

The threat of tornadoes was expected to last until late Friday for parts of Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana and Ohio. Forecasters at the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center said the massive band of storms put 10 million people at high risk of dangerous weather.

"We knew this was coming. We were watching the weather like everyone else," said Clark County, Ind., Sheriff Danny Rodden. "This was the worst case scenario. There's no way you can prepare for something like this."

In Henryville, the scene was eerie and somewhat chaotic. Cell phones and landlines were not working. Hundreds of firefighters and police zipped around town. Power lines were down and cars were flipped over. People walked down the street with shopping carts full of water and food, handing it out to whoever was in need.

Terry Brishaber said his uncle's mobile home was gone.

"I don't see any remnants. I don't know where it's at," he said.

Aerial footage from a TV news helicopter flying over Henryville showed numerous wrecked houses, some with their roofs torn off and many surrounded by debris. The video shot by WLKY in Louisville, Ky., also showed a mangled school bus protruding from the side of a one-story building and dozens of overturned semis strewn around the smashed remains of a truck stop.

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Tornado wrecks homes in Ala.; no word if injuries

UT notebook: Speaking of QB job, mum's the word

AUSTIN - Case McCoy talked first.

If he'd been at any other team's spring practice, or played any other position, or been at Texas at just about any time other than the second decade of the third millennium, that information would have been wholly insignificant.

But in this place, at this position, and in this time, there are no meaningless details. When McCoy beat teammate David Ash into the interview room after a Longhorns workout this week, it might have just been because he had a study hall to attend or was quicker in the shower.

In a quarterback controversy like the Longhorns have created, however, nothing seems so innocuous. At UT, where every public move is deliberated, putting McCoy in front of the cameras before Ash easily could've been intended as another subtle reminder that despite the overwhelming perception, McCoy is no backup.

And then McCoy's words, which sounded an awful lot like his head coach's, reiterated the same message.

"Nothing's been given to anyone," McCoy said.

Because UT's quarterbacks give interviews so rarely and because we're now in the second year of Mack Brown's staff's continual evasiveness about committing to one or another, each of McCoy's words carried weight. And it wasn't much of a stretch to assume "anyone" meant "Ash."

Still no hint

Ever since the sixth game of last season, when Ash played the entirety of a loss to Oklahoma State, the vast majority of evidence has pointed to Brown and offensive play-caller Bryan Harsin believing in Ash as their quarterback of the future. He started six of UT's last eight games, including the Holiday Bowl, where he was named the most outstanding offensive player.

But at no point has either Brown or Harsin acknowledged that Ash is even the slightest bit ahead of McCoy. When pressed repeatedly about the issue last week, Brown spent an hour employing the verbal contortionism of a politician trying to avoid a debate question.

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UT notebook: Speaking of QB job, mum's the word