CPA WordPress Websites

          

Take a look at our new CPA WordPress Websites!

Unleash the power of WordPress!  If you want ultimate control over media, blogs, and social networks then go no further, you have arrived.  Our CPA WordPress websites out perform all other CPA Website Templates on the market today.  Don’t be fooled by imitations that are restricted by a mainframe architecture. We believe that your website should be the best that it can be, and for that reason you are allowed to use any 3rd party software, add-ons, links, and webware of any kind.

We offer both a lease bundled package full of CPA Website Tools and a buy to own package.  Please feel free to test the demo site below.  Call (877-251-3273) to get the username and password so you can see the Administrative back end to these sites.  You can add Dynamic Content, ICFiles or CPA Email Manager for a low monthly fee.

Sample CPA website templates*:

CPA Website
CPA WordPress Website - Largo (demo)
CPA Website
CPA WordPress Website - Brownstone (sample)
CPA Website
CPA WordPress Website - New Chicago Marble (sample)

There are many ways you Can Use WordPress

WordPress started as just a blogging system, but has evolved to be used as full content management system and so much more through the thousands of plugins, widgets, and themes, WordPress is limited only by your imagination.

The following is a list of some of the features that come standard with WordPress, however there are literally hundreds of plugins that extend what WordPress does, so the actual functionality is nearly limitless. You are also free to do whatever you like with the WordPress code, extend it or modify in any way or use it for commercial projects without any licensing fees from WordPress.

Out of the Box

Great software should work with little configuration and setup. WordPress is designed to get you up and running and fully functional in no longer than five minutes. You shouldn't have to battle to use the standard functionality of WordPress.

WordPress developers work hard to make sure that every release is in keeping with this philosophy. WordPress asks for as few technical details as possible during the setup process as well as providing full explanations of anything it does ask.

Design for the Majority

Many end users of WordPress are non-technically minded. They don't know what AJAX is, nor do they care about which version of PHP they are using. The average WordPress user simply wants to be able to write without problems or interruption. These are the users that we design the software for as they are ultimately the ones who are going to spend the most time using it.

Clean, Lean, and Mean

The core of WordPress will always provide a solid array of basic features. It's designed to be lean and fast and will always stay that way. WordPress developers are constantly asked "when will X feature be built" or "why isn't X plugin integrated into the core". The rule of thumb is that the core should provide features that 80% or more of end users will actually appreciate and use. If the next version of WordPress comes with a feature that the majority of users immediately want to turn off, or think they'll never use, then we've blown it. If we stick to the 80% principle then this should never happen.

WordPress is able to do this because is has a very capable theme and plugin system and a fantastic developer community. Different people have different needs, and having the sheer number of quality WordPress plugins and themes allows users to customize their installations to their taste. That should allow all users to find the remaining 20% and make all WordPress features those they appreciate and use.

Striving for Simplicity

WordPress is never done with simplicity. WordPress developers want to make WordPress easier to use with every single release. They've got a good track record of this; if you don't believe us then just take a look back at some older versions of WordPress!

In past releases WordPress developers have taken major steps to improve ease of use and ultimately make things simpler to understand. One great example of this is core software updates. Updating used to be a painful manual task that was too tricky for a lot of our users. WordPress developers decided to focus on this and simplified it down to a single click. Now anyone with a WordPress install can perform one click upgrades on both the core of WordPress and plugins and themes.

WordPress developers love to challenge themselves and simplify tasks in ways that are positive for the overall WordPress user experience. Every version of WordPress should be easier and more enjoyable to use than the last.

Key Features


  • Full standards compliance — WordPress developers have gone to great lengths to make sure every bit of WordPress generated code is in full compliance with the standards of the W3C. This is important not only for interoperability with today’s browser but also for forward compatibility with the tools of the next generation. Your web site is a beautiful thing, and you should demand nothing less.
  • No rebuilding — Changes you make to your templates or entries are reflected immediately on your site, with no need for regenerating static pages.
  • WordPress Pages — Pages allow you to manage non-blog content easily, so for example you could have a static "About" page that you manage through WordPress. For an idea of how powerful this is, the entire WordPress.org site could be run off WordPress alone.
  • WordPress Links -- Links allow you to create, maintain, and update any number of blogrolls through your administration interface. This is much faster than calling an external blogroll manager.
  • WordPress Themes — WordPress comes with a full theme system which makes designing everything from the simplest blog to the most complicated webzine a piece of cake, and you can even have multiple themes with totally different looks that you switch with a single click. Have a new design every day.
  • Cross-blog communication tools— WordPress fully supports both the Trackback and Pingback standards, and is committed to supporting future standards as they develop.
  • Comments — Visitors to your site can leave comments on individual entries, and through Trackback or Pingback can comment on their own site. You can enable or disable comments on a per-post basis.
  • Spam protection — Out of the box WordPress comes with very robust tools such as an integrated blacklist and open proxy checker to manage and eliminate comment spam on your blog, and there is also a rich array of plugins that can take this functionality a step further.
  • Full user registration — WordPress has a built-in user registration system that (if you choose) can allow people to register and maintain profiles and leave authenticated comments on your blog. You can optionally close comments for non-registered users. There are also plugins that hide posts from lower level users.
  • Password Protected Posts — You can give passwords to individual posts to hide them from the public. You can also have private posts which are viewable only by their author.
  • Easy installation and upgrades — Installing WordPress and upgrading from previous versions and other software is a piece of cake. Try it and you'll wonder why all web software isn't this easy.
  • Easy Importing — WordPress currently has importers for Movable Type, Textpattern, Greymatter, Blogger, and b2. Work on importers for Nucleus and pMachine are under way.
  • XML-RPC interface — WordPress currently supports an extended version of the Blogger API, MetaWeblog API, and finally the MovableType API. You can even use clients designed for other platforms like Zempt.
  • Workflow — You can have types of users that can only post drafts, not publish to the front page.
  • Typographical niceties — WordPress uses the Texturize engine to intelligently convert plain ASCII into typographically correct XHTML entities. This includes quotes, apostrophes, ellipses, em and en dashes, multiplication symbols, and ampersands. For information about the proper use of such entities see Peter Sheerin's article The Trouble With Em ’n En.
  • Intelligent text formatting — If you've dealt with systems that convert new lines to line breaks before you know why they have a bad name: if you have any sort of HTML they butcher it by putting tags after every new line indiscriminately, breaking your formatting and validation. Our function for this intelligently avoids places where you already have breaks and block-level HTML tags, so you can leave it on without worrying about it breaking your code.
  • Multiple authors — WordPress’ highly advanced user system allows up to 10 levels of users, with different levels having different (and configurable) privileges with regard to publishing, editing, options, and other users.
  • Bookmarklets — Cross-browser bookmarklets make it easy to publish to your blog or add links to your blogroll with a minimum of effort.
  • Ping away — WordPress supports pinging Ping-O-Matic, which means maximum exposure for your blog to search engines.

There’s much more, but these are the highlights. If there's something that you really want, submit a request on the support forums and there's a good chance someone will whip it up for you.

Note: The WordPress Code - The license under which the WordPress software is released is the GPLv2 from the Free Software Foundation. A copy of the license is included with every copy of WordPress, but you can also read the text of the license here.

Service2Client LLC code – The code from our website templates and the content included in those templates are owned by Service2Client LLC.

For Information and pricing please contact one of our salesmen:
1-877-251-3273

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