It’s been a long time coming, but WordPress 3.3 forced the issue: Content Scheduler version 0.9.8 was just uploaded to the Plugin Repository a bit ago. Since version 0.9.7, I’ve quit my job, started a business, and otherwise turned things upside-down! I hope you’ll excuse the long wait for 0.9.8, and keep in touch with features you’d like and bugs you find.
Content Scheduler 0.9.8 does at least the following:
- Compatible with WordPress 3.3
Issue with the way I was previously handling user levels. - Manipulating tags on expired posts works great now.
- Support for Custom Post Types.
- Default expiration time function allows you to always add a specific amount of time to any new post you want to expire. (e.g., always expire new posts after, say, 48 hours, or 2 weeks, or whatever.)
A few other things I did:
- It might work with WordPress MU. I haven’t tested it, but put in all the code the way I knew how. Use at your own risk, but I doubt it will blow anything up.
- Users on some hosts had trouble getting content to expire. I’ve spruced up the code handling wp-cron scheduling, so we’ll see how that pans out. We’re handling everything by the book, but if you cannot get posts to expire, contact me and we’ll see what we can do.
Soon, resumes inundated employers. Most resumes looked nearly the same, and they stacked up on hiring managers’ desks. Eventually, people stopped reading resumes altogether, choosing to scan and sort them by post office-style machines searching for key words instead.
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