Stallion Responsive Theme version 8.4: added over 70 new color schemes! Stallion Responsive is not just a WordPress Theme that’s SEO friendly, it’s an entire WordPress SEO package of built-in plugins and SEO features taking WordPress to the next level in Post Panda SEO and Google performance metrics with advanced SEO measures to help take full advantage of the Google Hummingbird algorithm. Hummingbird is the Google search algorithm that understands human natural language patterns better than ever before: long tail keyword SERPs with a human touch and Stallion Responsive v8 includes multiple features to take advantage of Google: no other WordPress theme or SEO plugin has these Hummingbird features. Tested to WordPress Version 4.8.*. Note: It’s tested every day on […]
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Child theme install error
Installing to a local WordPress installation.
Parent theme installed without any errors.
Child theme installation error: Warning: POST Content-Length of 18082005 bytes exceeds the limit of 8388608 bytes in Unknown on line 0
Please advise,
Greg
PHP Error: Warning: POST Content-Length of bytes exceeds the limit of 8388608 bytes in Unknown on line 0
That’s not a WordPress child theme issue per se, it’s not even a WordPress issue per se it’s a PHP error warning due to a PHP setting being set a bit low.
What’s happening is your post_max_size (max upload size of a file) is being tripped because the Stallion child theme zip file is bigger than the setting.
8388608 bytes or 8MBs (which is the max size mentioned in the error) is smaller than the child theme zip (about 18MBs due to all the free header images etc…).
Search for this in Google and you’ll find lots of info about it:
Warning: POST Content-Length of bytes exceeds the limit of 8388608 bytes in Unknown on line 0
All I did was remove the number 8388608 from the error message since the number will be different for others with this error.
Check under Dashboard: “Media” > “Add New” and I bet the “Maximum upload file size:” is 8MB. 8MBs is a bit low, most servers start very low and though the Stallion parent theme is below 2MBs the child theme is significantly bigger, hence the error message.
Simple solution is unzip the child theme and manually move it into the relevant folder under your local install. To change the server setting the solution will be something like edit your php.ini file.
Find post_max_size=8M (might be another number)
Change to post_max_size=32M
Find upload_max_filesize=2M (might be another number)
Change to upload_max_filesize=32M
Every time I install a localhost server (any server) I make this change.
32MB should be more than enough for anything you might do in a localhost install, I wouldn’t set it this high in a live server though. I usually go for 16MBs for a liver server and manually upload the unzipped child theme using FTP.
Check under Dashboard: “Media” > “Add New” again and the number will change to whatever you set if you got it right.
David
PHP Error: Warning: POST Content-Length of bytes exceeds the limit of 8388608 bytes in Unknown on line 0
page level ad
Hi Dave! How to insert page lavel ad code of Adsense to Stallion responsive?
Responsive view not working on mobile after WP update
Hi Dave,
I’m running Stallion version 8.2.2 along with Stallion Child Theme 8.0 (I know, I should be updated to the latest Stallion version – 8.4 I believe? – but hadn’t gotten around to it).
I recently updated to WordPress 4.7.5, and now the responsive view is not working on mobile (it shows the desktop view).
I there something obvious I may be missing as to why I’m not getting the responsive view? It’s been a while since I’ve dug around in it so I’m a bit rusty.
Or are you aware of any changes between versions already, and is there anything I can simply change in the code to resolve it?
Thanks for any ideas you might have.
Cheers,
Erik
Responsive view not working on mobile after WP update
My cache plugin was causing the responsive view error
Hi Dave,
I left a comment earlier today about the desktop version displaying on mobile screens (rather than the responsive version) after I upgraded to the latest edition of WordPress (that comment might still be in moderation).
I dug a little deeper and it looks like it’s being caused by the caching plugin I’m using (WP Rocket).
The problem appears when I have mobile caching enabled (with the previous version of WordPress I was using, this was not an issue). If I switch mobile caching off in WP Rocket, it serves the correct mobile version on mobile screens.
So it sounds like there is something funky with how WP-Rocket is interacting with the latest edition of WordPress.
If you have any ideas that come to mind of what might be going on, I’m all ears, but otherwise I’ll check further with the cache plugin guys.
Either way, I guess it’s a good lesson for those using cache plugins who might have this issue, to try not only clearing the cache, but also deactivating the plugin altogether (or checking how the mobile cache settings are set up and at least deactivating the individual mobile-related setting(s) to see if that is the problem).
Anyway it’s been a little while, but I hope all is going well on your end!
And thanks again for the work you continue to put into this theme and its updates, it’s been 6+ years that I’ve been using it now and still happy with how my site(s) run on it.
Best,
Erik
My cache plugin was causing the responsive view error
WP Rocket Caching Plugin : Enable Caching for Mobile Devices
Hey Eric, hope things are going well.
I’m not familiar with the WP Rocket Caching Plugin (premium product) mainly as I use W3 Total Cache.
I can’t think of anything obvious that would cause an issue, all the Stallion Responsive mobile responsive features are CSS based (standard stuff). The view port is set in the head of the HTML code and the basic CSS for desktop output and additional mobile responsive CSS (in the mobile.css file) for anything below 800px wide (there’s around a dozen device sizes set in the mobile.css file).
I don’t know how the WP Rocket plugin works, as long as it can handle multiple theme CSS files** it shouldn’t cause issues.
** Stallion Responsive doesn’t use the standard single style.css file, it has one CSS file for the layout CSS, one for the fonts, one for the color CSS and one for mobile CSS rules. This allows selecting from 12 layout CSS files, 26 font CSS files, 110 color CSS files and the one mobile CSS file allowing for over 35,000 combinations (more if the user creates their own custom CSS files). The idea is to combine all the selected ones into one CSS file using a caching plugin like W3 Total Cache. BTW I think you’ll be missing many of the color schemes in the version of Stallion Responsive you are using (well worth an update :-)).
According to http://docs.wp-rocket.me/article/708-mobile-caching WP Rocket does do something different with mobile devices. Stallion Responsive is designed so there’s no need to do anything different on any device, Stallion is designed to serve the same content over all device sizes: WordPress core/browsers do the rest. For Stallion Responsive sites ideally any caching plugin would create one cache and server it to every device.
I don’t have enough information to be sure, but I think the options:
Should work, but without testing I can’t be sure.
Let me know if you’ve tried that setup.
I use W3 Total Cache and there’s options that don’t work well, because Stallion Responsive can serve a different set of CSS files on a Post by Post basis (every post can use a different layout/font/color combination, ~35,000 in total) W3 Total Cache should cache a different combined CSS file for any Post that has a different combination. I’ve found in the latest versions of W3 Total Cache the cached CSS file is using a messed up GZIPPED version of the CSS file if a particular W3 Total Cache option is set AND I use the CDN option (no idea why, had to turn the CDN option off). Caching is a complicated subject :-)
David
WP Rocket Caching Plugin : Enable Caching for Mobile Devices
Pros of WP Rocket cache plugin
Hey Dave, thanks for the reply. I’m going to forward it on over to the WP Rocket guys, they are already looking into it.
I’ve been using that plugin for a couple years now, due to periodic challenges with other free ones (some of which I liked but had issues with at times, like I know W3 Total is supposed to be quite good but one of the more complicated ones in setting up – I remember though you did have a recommended settings post somewhere here if I’m not mistaken). Anyway with WP Rocket the performance seems to be good, pretty simple to operate, and the service is also good.
Anyway, yea as you noted I am due to get the latest update going :) On that, just curious, any further Stallion feature additions in the works? You’ve added a lot of features with all the iterations over the years, so maybe there’s a time you consider it “finished” if that’s the best way to put it.
Pros of WP Rocket cache plugin
Free Premium WordPress SEO Plugins, Maybe?
As you know when I do updates it tends to be everything and the kitchen sink added to Stallion Responsive, so you’ll be missing some major feature updates. Since 8.2.2 there’s been three updates and that’s a LOT of changes, I completely rebuilt the color scheme system to make customization easier, last update I added 70 new color schemes for example. See https://stallion-theme.co.uk/mailing-list/ for some of the updates.
My wife and I are trying out a new career path, children’s picture book authors, though getting a literary agent has proved problematic (major issue for most wannabe authors). We are thinking about skipping the middleman (agents/publishers) and go straight to Kickstarter for funding, have to be in almost finished product territory for that route. I had some free time late last year so started work on a big theme update, but sales of Stallion Responsive have slowed down** to a point it’s not really worth my time to sell it anymore.
Takes a LOT of time to update, so put it on hold to work on an important project in December and only just finished the project.
** Think the problem is a combination of premium WordPress SEO themes being a tiny highly competitive niche (most users think an SEO plugin is the be all and end all of WordPress SEO) and Stallion is too complex for the average user. To cover all the important SEO features it takes a LOT of options (hundreds of them) and users tend not to like that level of complexity (it’s more like a developer tool than a theme).
In hindsight would have made more sense to create a couple of dozen SEO plugins that work well together with a core SEO theme than one huge SEO theme with everything in it. For example I built the Display Widgets SEO Plus Plugin last year and that’s based on one relatively small Stallion Responsive feature (based on an old plugin). Also started pulling some of the SEO code out of the theme to push it into the Stallion SEO Plugin which will work with any theme and if I finished all my plans would be significantly better than Yoast and All In One SEO Plugins.
So might start ‘converting’ the Stallion Responsive features it into small SEO plugins like the Display Widgets SEO Plus Plugin.
Don’t know yet :-)
David
Free Premium WordPress SEO Plugins, Maybe?
Stallion Responsive 8.4 Update
Hi David,
I cannot say how active you are on Stallion Theme, because the last comment seems to be from June 2017. I hope this is the right place to ask (I’ve bee away from blogging for a while now). I sent an email to davidlseo at gmail.com, but will try to extract most relevant stuff here, hopefully you can also review the email. I am interested in my 4th question and where you are on your journey.
1.- I have three sites running 8.1 or 8.2, I am not sure if I ‘must’ update (I didn’t keep track of changes from 8.1 to 8.2 to 8.4). My questions are: Do I need to pay for the 8.4 update? and where could I download the files? Last time when updating to 8.1/8.2, I couldn’t install from dashboard.
2.- How up to date is your SEO Tutorial info (both wordpress and general tutorials). Is this material still relevant? I want to learn SEO, really more oriented to SEO writing, and I guess I need to understand how SEO works.
3.- I remember back in 2014 (or earlier) you were blogging about ‘Make Money”, “Millionaire Journey”, etc. I was wondering, what happened with that writing and efforts? How was/is your journey? Are you still working on Making Money?
To be honest, I found some peace after reading Prov 30:7-9… at the same time, cannot neglect the part of preparing myself for my future by having a backup in case things go bad in my current job and to ensure I am financially well prepared for when I retire…
4.- I guess I wanted to ask too (bonus question)… with Google AI either here or coming, does SEO still makes sense? I mean wouldn’t traditional SEO tend to die? for instance, there could be applications that already generate human-like writings?
Thanks in advance,
Héctor
Stallion Responsive 8.4 Update
I Ignore Most Emails Asking SEO Questions
I received your email, but didn’t respond because you’d not gone to the effort (and still haven’t) to do basic research like going to this sites home page which at the top states:
I get LOTS of emails like yours and if the person hasn’t performed basic research first I tend not to respond.
I have no plans to release another Stallion theme update, 8.4 is the last public release. Future SEO products I create will only be available to a select few: my SEO clients as part of the service.
1. I posted update information at https://stallion-theme.co.uk/mailing-list/ and the question has been answered multiple times about the value of updating via comments on this site. If you decide to update there should be an update option under your Dashboard.
2. Core SEO doesn’t change that much, most of my SEO Tutorials are still relevant. Since I’ve restarted my SEO consulting service (I’m an SEO consultant again) I’m creating new SEO tutorial content at my SEO Gold Site.
3. Yes I still make money.
4. Google search is your friend, there’s loads about AI online, if you are serious about offering SEO services in the future (as your email suggests) you should be able to research this using Google and be able to find multiple sides to the debate about AI.
David
I Ignore Most Emails Asking SEO Questions
SSL integration with AdSense on Stallion Responsive
Hello Dave! I have ssl enabled on my website. After I’ve installed stallion responsive and turned AdSense ON, the ads didn’t show up and blocked in Chrome as an unsafe script.
In the address bar I got a notification:
“Insecure content blocked
This page is trying to load scripts from
unauthenticated sources. ”
And only having clicked the prompt “Load unsafe scripts”, the adsense ads showed up.
How to fix that?
Thank you.
SSL integration with AdSense on Stallion Responsive
Legacy AdSense Ads NOT Served via a Secure HTTPS URL
The built in default AdSense code is the very old legacy code and is there as a backup to get a site running quickly, but I added it before SSL was important and AdSense was served via http URLs, now it fails on https sites.
Solution is to go to the Stallion AdSense Options page and add responsive AdSense ad code to the relevant forms.
I do this for my sites that run AdSense, it’s been the best way to add AdSense ads for 5+ years way before SSL was important.
In the relevant forms you add code like this:
<!-- stradunit1 -->
<ins class="adsbygoogle stradunit1"
style="display:inline-block"
data-ad-client="ca-pub-8325072546567078"
data-ad-slot="2310085616"></ins>
<script>
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
</script>
You get the code from your AdSense account by creating several ads.
More details about this at https://stallion-theme.co.uk/google-adsense-responsive-ad-unit-beta-stallion-responsive-wordpress-theme-integration/
David
Legacy AdSense Ads NOT Served via a Secure HTTPS URL
Twitter ON loads unsafe scripts
FYI
I’ve spent a while till I finally figured out that Twitter Button ON in Promotion Options makes a browser notification that a page is trying to load unsafe scripts.
Turned it OFF and it solved the problem.