Why CI/CD Matters for WordPress and WooCommerce If your team is still deploying WordPress changes via FTP, manual Git pulls, or clicking “Update” in the admin panel, you’re taking unnecessary…
Tag Archives: WordPress
Why the WordPress Login Page Is Target Number One WordPress powers roughly 43 percent of the public web. That ubiquity makes wp-login.php one of the most scanned endpoints on the…
What Is Object Cache—and How Does It Differ from Page Cache? Developers new to WordPress performance often conflate two distinct caching layers. Understanding the difference is the first step toward…
WooCommerce powers a significant share of global ecommerce, which makes it a high-value target. Attackers do not discriminate by store size: automated scanners probe every public WordPress installation looking for…
Every WordPress site faces automated probes — credential stuffing on /wp-login.php, XML-RPC amplification, REST API enumeration, and targeted plugin exploits. A Web Application Firewall at the network edge intercepts these…
Page speed is not a vanity metric. Google uses Core Web Vitals as a ranking signal, and research consistently shows that every additional second of load time reduces conversions. If…
Choosing between LiteSpeed and Nginx for WordPress or WooCommerce is consequential. Both servers handle tens of thousands of concurrent connections with low overhead, yet they differ in ways that directly…
Most WordPress site owners have a backup plugin installed. Far fewer have ever run a restore drill. That gap between having a backup and trusting a backup is where sites…
Why Docker for WordPress DevelopmentThe phrase “works on my machine” has killed more release schedules than any bug ever could. When a team of engineers spreads across time zones —…
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