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4 articles from June 2010

Gmail: Delete big attachments with IMAPsize

IMAPsize is an easy to use freeware tool to find and delete those big attachments that tend to accumulate in Gmail archives over time.

This was becoming an issue as I keep a local backup of my Gmail account using IMAP Backup. And while you can find attachments in Gmail using search modifiers has:attachment and filename:zip, you can’t search or sort on attachment size.

The solution: the IMAPsize freeware Windows IMAP utility found via this blog post from Amit Agarwal. IMAPsize’s speciality is searching your Gmail account for folders (Gmail labels) and messages based on attachment size.

I quickly found and deleted my large attachments using IMAPsize. Backup problem solved. Recommended.

WordPress 3.0: Minor CSS issue with “W3 Total Cache”

The WordPress 3.0 update was OK; I only found a minor CSS issue with the W3 Total Cache plugin that improves WordPress performance.

One of my hosting accounts limits PHP memory, so for these blogs I need to deactive all plugins before running the automatic update. My other hosting service has enough PHP RAM to not have to do this, which is nice.

All my blogs have now been running WordPress 3.0 in production for a few days and so far I’ve not met any problems with the core product.

One minor issue has been with the CSS minification in the W3 Total Cache plugin. I’m using the latest development version of W3TC but it has an issue with CSS so I’ve disabled minification until I’ve time to look into this further.

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Web frameworks: Something new for COBOL developers

If you’ve worked with mainframe COBOL in a previous life you might appreciate the “COBOL ON COGS” web framework.

COBOL on Cogs homepage screenshot

You’ve heard of Ruby on Rails, but what about all those COBOL developers? Well, we can goto COBOL ON COGS and reminisce. Pay attention as the screens change to bring back fond memories of the massive, built like a battleship, IBM 3270 green-screen terminals. A very nice touch!

WordPress: Redirection plugin great for moving house

The Redirection WordPress plugin manages 301 redirections, keeps track of 404 errors and tidies up any loose ends your site may have.

If you’re changing your WordPress site or blog structure and moving posts and pages around, then John Godley’s Redirection plugin makes it easy to add 301 redirects to the new canonical definitions. It also catches 404 errors, with an easy way to add redirects for incorrect URLs, common typos etc.

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