We’ve been running a series of experiments using ChatGPT 5.4 integrated into a website chatbot across different environments: 🌐 a main website 🎯 Goal: simulate realistic user behavior and observe how the model responds over time. ⚙️ Test setup The chatbot is designed to (no self promo here, just context): 📌 answer strictly based on website content (RAG-like approach) Over time, we intentionally
Introduction Backup plugins are useful — but they are not a real disaster‑recovery strategy. In this article, I break down the real reasons why backup plugins fail, what actually happens during a server‑level crash, and how to build a recovery plan that works in the real world. Backup Plugins Only Work When WordPress Works A backup plugin depends on: WordPress running PHP running MySQL running the
Riad Hasan has optimized dozens of WordPress sites for clients worldwide. In this guide, he shares the exact techniques he uses to achieve sub-2-second load times and perfect Core Web Vitals scores. Performance isn't just about speed — it impacts SEO, user experience, and conversions. Riad Hasan explains his systematic approach to WordPress optimization. Google's Core Web Vitals are now ranking fa
Stop clicking through wp-admin for every small task. WP-CLI is a command-line tool that lets you manage WordPress sites faster — all from your terminal. Why WP-CLI? Problems It Solves Is It Good or Bad? Setup & Installation Must-Know Commands A Quick Real-World Use Case Your First Custom Script What's Next Every WordPress developer knows the pain — update 12 plugins, flush cache, reset a password,
Three days of guided exercises. Today — no template, no "here's the complete code, just copy and paste." Just a brief: based on what you know — build your WishList contract. A personal WishList where only the owner can fulfill a wish. Small enough to finish in one session. Not so small that the decisions made themselves. Code: github.com/alena-dev-soft/solidity-learn/contracts/04day/ The first thi
Day 3: Voting, Sybil Attacks and Identity Day 3 was the first day that felt like actual software engineering rather than syntax tourism. The task: write a voting contract. Simple enough on the surface - until you start poking at the security model and realize the whole thing has serious gaps in its logic. What looked like a toy example turned out to be a good proxy for real system design problem
Day 2: Access Control Counter.sol - a little better than "Hello World", right? The goal: write a simple Counter contract - increment, decrement, reset - // SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT pragma solidity ^0.8.0; contract Counter { uint256 public count; address public owner; constructor() { owner = msg.sender; count = 0; } function increment() public {
A .NET Dinosaur in Web3 — Day 1: First Smart Contract I've been writing .NET for many years. Today I deployed my first smart contract. I'd like to share my journey into Web3 — every single day. I love what I do — really. I'm a .NET Dinosaur and Azure-passionate developer, Instead of drowning in YouTube tutorials and boring courses, I did something Think of it as a personal trainer who never judg