Web development, tools, design — practical notes and reviews.
18 publications · last updated 13 June 2026
Elementor is a visual page builder for WordPress. It has a free version, Elementor, and a paid version, Elementor Pro. On this page, you can download the activated version of Elementor Pro for free to explore its premium features before purchasing the official version. For use on a real website, we strongly recommend installing Elementor Pro with a valid license.
If you need a simple business website or a basic landing page, the free version of Elementor will almost certainly be enough. Pro pays off when you need the Theme Builder, forms, a WooCommerce store, or pop-ups. In that case, the license saves much more time than it costs.
Before installing any ZIP archive on your website, we recommend checking the files for viruses and malicious code yourself. You can use VirusTotal for this.
Upload the archive to VirusTotal, wait for the scan to finish, and make sure the file does not contain any threats. It is also recommended to create a backup of your website and database before installation, especially if you are testing the plugin on an already active project.
If you do not want to figure everything out yourself, we at moiseefweb build and configure Elementor websites from start to finish: from templates and forms to online stores and performance optimization. Contact us, and we will tell you whether you need Pro in your case and how to do everything properly from the beginning.
Plenty of people running a small business in Spain, whether it's a bakery, a workshop, or a self-employed professional, have everything set up the same way today: an Instagram profile, conversations over WhatsApp, orders by direct message, and no website. And sooner or later a question comes up that we hear all the time: “Customers are coming in, but everyone keeps telling me I need a website, and everyone offers the same thing: a subscription to a ready-made solution, an AI builder, or a turnkey site. Do I even need it?”
We'll answer honestly, even if it goes against our interests as a studio. A website is a tool, not a mandatory box to tick. It has one job: to help you sell. So the right question isn't “can a website be built?” (it can, in a hundred ways), but “do you need one right now?” And the answer is different for every business.
The end goal of any business is the sale. Social media, a website, a marketplace, word of mouth: these are all just channels that lead the customer toward a purchase. None of them is an end in itself. A website is needed precisely when it makes the customer's path to purchase shorter and easier than what you already have.
This leads to something unexpected. If your social media presence fully covers every task (customers find you, message you, place orders, pay, and that's enough for you), then you don't need a website. In fact, it will get in your way: you'll have a second channel to maintain, fill with content, and promote, and it won't give you anything back, because the problem it solves simply doesn't exist for you yet.
The most common case where a website is unnecessary is the business-card site. Your name, a couple of lines about you, photos, contact details. Even ten years ago, social media handled this pretty well. There were just fewer tools back then than there are now. Today a social network can do almost everything, right down to taking payment directly in the profile. A lively Instagram profile with reviews, recent photos, and a quick reply by direct message does the same thing as that card, only better and more familiar to the customer. A separate business-card site, in this case, is work done just to tick a box.
Now, about the ready-made solutions you're so eagerly offered. A subscription to a platform or an AI builder looks simple at first, but in the end it still turns into work: that website has to be managed, filled with content, kept up to date. It will most likely turn out harder than the social media group you're already used to. And then there's traffic: followers already come to your social accounts, but at first nobody sees a new website, and you'll have to build an audience from scratch all over again. Building a website from the ground up, yourself or on commission, takes even more effort and money. If there's no real pain behind all this that a website would remove, you're just adding work for yourself.
The turning point comes at a moment you'll feel very clearly yourself. You notice that more and more of your time goes not into the business, but into running it. Scrolling through the message thread, writing down every order by hand, checking whether the payment has come in (Bizum, bank transfer, or PayPal), answering the same questions about availability and price for the tenth time. You're no longer baking, sewing, or selling: you're working as an administrator.
The second sign comes from the customer's side. It becomes inconvenient for them: to place an order, they have to write, wait for a reply, ask the price, and agree on payment. Meanwhile, the competitor next door has a clear storefront, a cart, online payment, and everything runs by itself, around the clock. At that point convenience is what decides, and it isn't on your side. That's when a website stops being a box to tick and becomes the very tool that gives you back your time and doesn't scare the customer off. If you've recognized yourself in this, we're here for you, at moiseefweb.com.
“Why a website? I'll just sell on a marketplace,” sounds logical, but it's a trap. Essentially, the marketplace rents you a shelf inside its enormous store, and it sets the terms: commissions, mandatory promotions, penalties for breaking its rules, which can change at any moment on top of that. And the customer isn't yours: they're the marketplace's customer, and you're just one of many interchangeable sellers in the search results.
For a local business this is especially unprofitable. You most likely sell not to the whole world, but to your city or your region, and here it isn't the size of the catalog that wins, but precision. Your own online store plus targeted local advertising works better: the customer comes to you, stays with you, and you don't hand over a slice of every sale to rent someone else's shelf. The money that would go to marketplace commissions is far more sensibly invested in your own storefront and in advertising.
A website is a tool, not a default necessity. A small business that has everything covered by social media doesn't need a website, and it will only get in the way. But the moment you start drowning in manual admin, and the customer finds it more convenient to go to a competitor, that same website turns from a burden into the thing that saves you time and brings sales back.
Not sure which stage you're at or whether you need a website right now? Write to us at moiseefweb.com. In a half-hour conversation we'll tell you honestly whether you need a website at all, and if you do, which kind and what it needs to be able to do so that it pays for itself rather than ending up as dead weight.
On this page you can download, for free, an archive with two useful tools for WordPress: Avada Website Builder For WordPress & WooCommerce and Elegant Tabs for Fusion Builder and Avada.
These solutions are often used together to build modern WordPress sites where a flexible visual editor, ready-made design elements, a responsive layout and convenient content formatting without writing a lot of code by hand all matter.
To build and style a WordPress site, the archive includes two ZIP files:
Avada Website Builder is a multipurpose WordPress theme suitable for building corporate sites, landing pages, online stores, blogs, portfolios, service sites and other projects.
Avada includes a visual editor, global design settings, ready-made elements, page templates and tools to configure the site's appearance without editing code by hand.
Elegant Tabs for Fusion Builder and Avada extends the content-formatting options inside Avada and lets you create attractive tabs, tab blocks and structured information sections.
The plugin is handy for pages where a lot of information has to fit compactly: service descriptions, product specs, FAQs, pricing, instructions, benefits, technical data or blocks with extra content.
The combination of Avada Website Builder and Elegant Tabs fits various types of WordPress sites, especially when the project needs to be put together quickly, styled nicely and then edited conveniently from the admin panel.
First install and activate Avada Website Builder For WordPress & WooCommerce, since it is the main theme and is responsible for the visual builder, the templates and the overall structure of the site.
After activating Avada, install and activate Elegant Tabs for Fusion Builder and Avada. The plugin should be used together with Avada and Fusion Builder so that the tab elements display correctly in the visual editor.
Before installing any ZIP archive on your site, we recommend checking the files yourself for viruses and malicious code. You can use the VirusTotal service for this.
Just upload each archive to the VirusTotal site, wait for the scan to finish and make sure the files contain no threats.
Before installing the theme or the plugins, it's a good idea to back up your site and database, especially if you're installing them on a live site with already configured pages, WooCommerce products, templates or custom styles.
If errors appear after installation, check your WordPress and PHP version, the hosting limits, file access permissions, compatibility with active plugins and that Avada Builder is installed correctly.
For live commercial projects, we recommend buying the official Avada licence from the developer. That gives you access to updates, support and demo templates, and reduces the risk of security and compatibility problems.
People often write to us with the same thing: "I tried to put a site together with ChatGPT (or Claude, Gemini, Grok), something came out, but next to the competition it looks poor. Can you finish it?" Sometimes finishing is cheaper than rewriting. Usually it isn't. This article exists so you understand the situation before you spend a month on a build you'll later have to throw away.
Straight to the question you probably came here for. Can you build a website with AI? Yes, you can. That's not the question. The question is what level the site will be at, and who it will compete against.
Without this context, the whole conversation about AI hangs in the air. The web has moved in waves from the start, and on every wave someone declared the developer's profession dead.
In the early 2000s a website was a single PHP file with markup, styles and logic all in one heap. Then styles were pulled out and proper markup arrived. Then jQuery came, and animation and interactivity became available to almost anyone. Then the CMSs arrived: WordPress, Joomla, Drupal, and it sounded like "right, now the business owner runs the site himself". Then libraries showed up by the dozen, React rewrote the rules of the frontend, and builders like Wix and Tilda promised a site without a single line of code.
The feeling was the same every time: there, now you really can do it alone, the developer is no longer needed. And every time something else happened. The tool lowered the entry barrier, and the market immediately raised the quality bar. A site that looked great in 2008 felt like a postcard from the past by 2014. AI is simply the next wave in that same line, not the end of the story.
Need a business-card site (name, a couple of paragraphs about you, a photo, contacts, a WhatsApp button)? Yes, AI will put it together in an evening, and it will be fine. A hundred percent your case if you're a photographer, a psychologist, a private tutor or a freelancer who needs a tidy address online.
But here's the catch the AI marketing carefully avoids. This was already possible ten years ago, without any AI. Ready-made themes for WordPress and OpenCart, templates for Tilda and Wix sold for 20 to 60 dollars: buy it, drop in your photo and text, publish. AI changed nothing essential here, it just sped up a little something that already took an evening. If someone sells you a "revolution" using a business-card site as the example, they're selling you something that's been available since 2013.
This is where the real work starts, and this is where AI stops being a magic wand. And not because it's "dumb". On the contrary, it's very powerful. The reason is different: a precise requirement for a website can't be expressed in human language.
A simple example. You say: "make the button green and nice". What is nice? Which green exactly? AI will give an average version, statistically close to what people usually call nice. But you need something specific: a gradient from #16a34a to #22c55e that transitions smoothly over 400 milliseconds on hover, with a soft shadow underneath. That can only be expressed in CSS. Or: the modal shouldn't just appear, it should slide in from the bottom with an elastic ease-out (cubic-bezier, not linear), bouncing slightly at the end. That can only be expressed in JavaScript.
CSS, JavaScript and PHP are precisely the language that conveys to the machine exactly what you want, with no loss. Human language is too blurry for that. AI writes this code brilliantly if you tell it precisely what. But to tell it precisely what, you have to know what even exists, what it's called, and how one thing affects another. That is exactly the developer's job. AI hasn't abolished it, it has sped it up for those who have it.
And that's still just the surface. With logic it gets harder. Take a task that sounds simple on paper: the discount on an order depends on the customer's loyalty points, their tier in the loyalty programme, the order total and the current promotion, and on top of that it must not push the price below cost and has to calculate VAT correctly. Just to describe it, you already have to sit down and think through all the rules: which takes priority, points or the promotion; what happens on a return; how to round; what if there are more points than the order total. At that stage you're effectively already doing the main work, and the language that pins it down without ambiguity is code again, not "well, some discount by points". AI will write the function, but you work out the rules and how they fit together yourself. And that's one function out of a hundred, and none of them may contradict the others. This is what's called project architecture, and it sits entirely on the human's side. And that's not all: use-case scenarios, edge cases, error handling, load, security. Each one adds decisions of the same kind.
With today's AI you'll probably build something at the level of early-2000s Amazon. The problem is that it's 2026, and you're not competing with sites from 2003, but with those investing right now in speed, the mobile version, animation, accessibility and SEO. And everyone has AI today: developers, marketing agencies and digital studios all use it, so the bar has gone up for the whole market at once, not just for you. You're not competing against whoever has access to AI, but against whoever knows how to use it.
It used to be enough to just have a site to look decent. Then you needed it to adapt to mobile. Then speed. Today the bar is a flawless mobile experience, microanimations that make sense, a clean structure for SEO in several languages, and a thought-through UX. AI helps reach that bar if you know what to reach for. If you don't, it hands you, with full confidence, a site at the level of the previous decade.
To keep it concrete. These are the specific situations where AI on its own won't get you to the result, and you need a person to put it all together:
AI is a powerful tool, no argument. But a tool, not a replacement for the craft. It lowered the entry barrier for the simple and at the same time raised the bar for the complex. A business-card site is now even easier to build than ten years ago. A competitive product, though, still needs a person who keeps the whole project in their head and can explain the exact requirement to the machine.
If you're currently choosing between "I'll quickly build it myself with GPT" and "I'll hire a team", and you're not sure which side your project falls on, write to us. Half an hour of conversation will make it clear what you actually need and in which stack to get it right the first time.
At month one, the decision looks obvious. You subscribe to Shopify for 39 dollars a month, choose a template, upload your products, and your store is live by Friday. By year two, you are paying 250 dollars a month between platform and apps, your SEO has plateaued, Bizum still cannot be integrated, and migrating to a proper custom solution would cost ten thousand euros and three months of project time. This pattern lands on our desk at Moiseefweb almost every week.
This guide is meant to help you make the correct decision before the project starts, not two years later. One disclaimer upfront: we are not going to tell you that website builders are bad. They are not. But their useful range is narrower than the marketing suggests, and most business owners only discover the boundaries after they have already invested time, money, and brand equity. The promise of «you can build anything» is true until you actually need something substantial.
Validating an idea. If you want to launch a landing page in a week and test whether there is demand, Wix or Tilda are the rational choice. Two months of subscription and seven days of work save you months of development and several thousand euros if the hypothesis does not hold. When it does hold, you migrate.
Personal brand, portfolio, professional one-pager. Photographer, consultant, lawyer, coach, therapist. A builder covers this use case completely. The business does not scale through the website, traffic is modest, customisation is not required. Tilda or a simple WordPress on a free theme will serve for years.
Small shop with fewer than 50 SKUs and monthly revenue under two thousand euros. Shopify Basic at 39 dollars a month carries this comfortably, especially if you sell in a single currency, in a single country, with standard payment methods. When revenue grows, you migrate. That is the normal life cycle.
This is where it gets interesting. Most of the customers who arrive at our office with a problem fall into one of four situations.
The price of convenience compounds. Shopify Basic is 39 dollars a month, plus a 2 percent transaction fee unless you use Shopify Payments (and in Spain you cannot accept payments without Stripe or Redsys, because Bizum is not supported). Additional apps for reviews, multi-currency, shipping, advanced SEO, contact forms run between 5 and 50 dollars each. A real monthly Shopify invoice after a year of operation rarely sits below 150 to 250 dollars. Across three years that adds up to between 5,400 and 9,000 dollars in recurring spend. A custom build on WooCommerce or a headless stack with a one-time payment costs between 4,000 and 10,000 euros, plus hosting of 20 to 50 euros a month. By year three, the custom path is already cheaper in absolute terms.
The platform does not support what the local market requires. In Spain, Bizum is not optional for retail and B2C; it is the default consumer payment method. Shopify does not support it directly, only through external gateways with added fees. Wix does not support it at all. Tilda does not support it. Electronic invoicing under AEAT regulations (TicketBAI in the Basque Country, Verifactu nationwide from 2026) is also not covered out of the box. Patching these gaps with third-party services produces a fragile zoo of integrations that eventually becomes more expensive than rebuilding from scratch.
SEO collides with the technical limits of the platform. Shopify generates URLs in the form of /products/name and /collections/name with no option to restructure them. It duplicates content across collections. Pages load with a heavy JavaScript runtime. Wix has historically ranked poorly on Google. The Wix team has made significant improvements over the past few years, but breaking into the top ten for competitive queries remains difficult. Tilda renders entire pages in JavaScript, and although Google can process this, load speed suffers and Core Web Vitals (a confirmed ranking signal since 2021) almost always sit in the red.
Vendor lock-in. This is the part with the longest-term consequences. A Shopify store cannot be transferred to your own server. You can export content as CSV, but the design, templates, payment configuration, order history, and installed apps stay on the platform. Wix behaves the same way. Tilda allows export to static HTML, but the output is plain pages without a backend, without e-commerce, without form processing. After three to five years, the accumulated SEO equity (external backlinks pointing to specific URLs, ranking of individual pages in search, retargeting pixels, email subscribers) is locked to the platform. Migrating means losing part of that equity in transit.
A list of concrete signals. If even one of these applies to your project, a builder will almost certainly become a bottleneck within twelve to twenty-four months.
There is a middle option that the marketing of Shopify and Wix carefully avoids mentioning. It is WordPress with WooCommerce, installed on your own server, extended with a small number of custom plugins built for the specific needs of your business. Technically it is still a «ready engine», but you own the code, the database, and the theme. Migration is possible at any time. Initial cost is comparable to Shopify Plus, but the ceiling is an order of magnitude higher. For most SMEs in Spain this is the optimal compromise: not a five-figure ground-up development project, but not a platform cage either.
For more demanding projects there is another option: a headless architecture. Backend on Laravel or Django, frontend on Next.js deployed on Vercel or Railway, database on Neon. Initial cost is higher (10,000 to 20,000 euros for a mid-sized e-commerce), but you get loading performance no platform can match and an architecture that scales reliably to tens of thousands of SKUs.
In the first meeting we ask three or four questions: revenue, number of products, whether local payment methods matter, what integrations are required, whether internationalisation is planned. If the answers describe a profile where a builder is genuinely the better option, we say so directly: «Launch on Shopify, we can talk again in twelve to eighteen months.» This is not a sales tactic, it is economic realism. Charging a client 8,000 euros for a store that would run perfectly on Shopify at 100 euros a month is not honest work.
If the profile is different (growing revenue, real integration requirements, critical SEO, local payment methods needed, long-term business horizon), we produce a three- to five-year TCO calculation and discuss options. Sometimes the answer is WordPress with custom plugins. Sometimes a full build on a modern stack. For more demanding projects, headless. The choice follows the project profile, not our internal preferences.
The difference between fighting Shopify Liquid on your own and working with a specialised team is concrete. The complex part stays with us. Bizum, AEPD, Verifactu, multilingual SEO, ERP integrations, performance, technical SEO. You focus on customers, on the product, on the business. That is the practical value of a specialised agency: you should not need to learn why Shopify Liquid will not let you customise a checkout step, or why a Wix site takes nine seconds to load on mobile. That complexity belongs on our side of the table.
Website builders are a sensible tool when applied to the right problem in the right context. They are neither inherently bad nor a universal solution. The most common mistake we see, week after week, is launching a business on a builder that from day one needs a different architecture, on the assumption «we will migrate later, once we grow». The migration almost always costs more than the correct build would have cost from the start. If you are currently weighing «fast on Shopify» against «better on a custom solution» and are unsure which side fits your project, write to us. In thirty minutes of conversation it usually becomes clear whether our involvement is justified or whether you are perfectly served by a builder for another year or two.
Spain is the fifth largest economy in the EU, with 48 million residents, a fast-growing e-commerce sector, and one of the highest digital adoption rates in southern Europe. For a founder based in Berlin, Amsterdam, Warsaw or Stockholm, this looks like an obvious expansion target. Strong consumer market, lower customer acquisition costs than DACH countries, established infrastructure, EU regulation that you already understand. On paper it should be straightforward.
In practice, founders who try to enter the Spanish market without a local partner usually hit the same wall within the first quarter. Conversion rates that should have been 3-4% sit at 0.5%. CAC that worked in Germany triples in Spain. The sales team you built around Hubspot sequences in English suddenly stops responding to leads. And the product roadmap derails into months of cultural and technical fixes nobody had budgeted for.
It is not because the Spanish market is hostile to outsiders. It is because Spanish customers behave differently from northern European customers, and most of those differences are invisible from a desk in Hamburg or Eindhoven.
The first reality check is language penetration. Despite what international rankings suggest, functional B2B English in Spain is far lower than in the Netherlands, Germany or Scandinavia. In SME segments below 50 employees (which is roughly 99% of Spanish companies) the working language is Spanish, period. Your beautifully written English landing page will be technically readable for the buyer, but every cognitive friction reduces trust. At the moment of payment, that friction is enough to lose the conversion.
The second is consumer expectations. Spanish customers are slower to commit, more relationship-driven and significantly more sensitive to social proof in their own language. A page full of five-star reviews in German or English on a Spanish e-commerce site reads as suspicious, not impressive. A chat widget that only responds in English signals that you are not really invested in the market. A pricing structure that lists figures pre-VAT, the way you do at home, feels dishonest in Spain where the standard is "all-in" pricing visible from the first click.
The third is the channel mix. Spain is not as Google-dominated as Northern Europe. WhatsApp Business is a mainstream B2B channel here. Instagram drives a much larger share of consumer purchase decisions than in DACH. Telegram is used by specific communities. LinkedIn outreach campaigns that produce results in Munich produce silence in Valencia. Founders who copy-paste their northern playbook tend to burn quarter one before realising the channel mix needs rebuilding.
Translating content with DeepL and publishing without local review. The translation will be technically accurate. It will also miss every cultural cue that makes a Spanish customer feel understood. The cost is invisible on day one and devastating by month six, when retention and word-of-mouth fail to compound.
Hiring a Spanish freelancer remotely without integrating them into the rest of the team. The freelancer delivers in Spanish, but does not understand the product roadmap, the brand voice or the technical stack. The result is a Spanish version of the site that is correct in isolation but disconnected from everything else the company does.
Underestimating legal and operational adaptation. Invoicing, VAT, payment methods, GDPR localised disclaimers, cookie banners under AEPD rules, the specific Spanish version of consumer protection law for returns and warranties. None of this is exotic, but all of it needs to be implemented correctly before launch. Founders who delay this work tend to discover it during their first compliance audit, which is the worst possible moment.
Ignoring local payment infrastructure. Stripe Europe works in Spain, but Spanish customers also expect Bizum (the de facto standard for instant mobile payments here) and Redsys (the national card processing layer used by most Spanish banks). A checkout flow without these options leaves money on the table, especially in B2C and smaller B2B segments.
The team that actually solves this profile of problem has three properties at once. They speak fluent English internally and externally, so communication with you, your team, your investors and your reports stays frictionless. They speak Spanish natively and operate inside the local culture, so the customer-facing work is real, not translated. And they understand European B2B context broadly enough that you do not have to explain how a German invoicing flow differs from a Spanish one, or why your Dutch parent company has its own reporting requirements.
This combination is rare in the market. Pure Spanish agencies struggle with English-language internal communication and northern European business culture. Pure offshore teams from Eastern Europe or Latin America deliver in English but have no real presence in Spain. The intersection is small, and it tends to be staffed by people who came to Spain years ago for personal reasons, integrated into the local market, and now serve as the bridge for founders going in the opposite direction.
Moiseefweb has been operating in Spain since 2019. Seven years in the local market, which means we built our portfolio here before the recent waves of relocation to Spain in 2022 and after. By the time newer teams arrived, we already had a track record with Spanish clients in Valencia, Alicante, Barcelona and Madrid, a registered local entity, and the operational knowledge that only comes from working inside a market over time.
Before Spain, from 2016, we operated in Moscow as Rus Business Marketing, focused on digital projects for German industrial manufacturers. Corporate sites in multiple languages, technical SEO for B2B verticals, CRM integrations for companies whose sales cycles ran six to twelve months. Three years of working with German mid-market industrial clients gave us a working understanding of how northern European companies communicate, document, decide and invoice. We carry that experience into projects with EU founders today.
Our team works in four languages: Spanish, English, Russian and German. For an international founder this means you can run weekly calls, write tickets and review documents in English while we deliver customer-facing work in correct, locally calibrated Spanish. We bridge the two sides, you do not have to.
On the technical side, we are pragmatic. WordPress when you need fast content publishing and a clean admin panel. Next.js on Vercel or Railway with Neon when the product needs real interactivity, SSR performance, or a serious frontend stack. Laravel with Inertia and React when the backend logic is genuinely complex. We pick technology by problem, not by fashion. Our portfolio across categories is visible in the Services section of our site, and our open-source plugins are in the Software section.
Entering the Spanish market from outside is not impossibly hard. It just rewards founders who set up the right local partnership instead of trying to operate it from a distance. The fastest path is to find a team that speaks your business language, executes in Spanish at native quality, and has been in the market long enough to know what works and what fails before you spend the budget. If you are considering Spain as a market and want to discuss what a good entry would look like, write to us. We will give you an honest read on whether your product fits, what would need to change, and how we would help.
On this page, you can download for free an archive with two useful WordPress plugins: Advanced Custom Fields (ACF) Pro and ACF Frontend For Elementor.
These plugins are often used together to create flexible WordPress websites where you need not only to add custom fields, but also to display or edit them on the frontend of the website using Elementor.
The archive includes two ZIP files for working with custom fields and frontend forms:
Advanced Custom Fields (ACF) Pro allows you to create custom fields for posts, pages, WooCommerce products, custom post types, taxonomies, users, and other WordPress elements.
With ACF Pro, you can add text fields, images, files, galleries, repeaters, flexible content blocks, and global website settings.
ACF Frontend For Elementor allows you to create forms based on ACF fields and place them on Elementor pages. This is useful when users or administrators need to add and edit content without accessing the standard WordPress admin panel.
First, install and activate Advanced Custom Fields (ACF) Pro, as it is responsible for creating and storing custom fields.
After that, install and activate ACF Frontend For Elementor. For frontend forms to work correctly, Elementor must also be installed and activated.
Before installing any ZIP archive on your website, we recommend checking the files for viruses and malicious code yourself. You can use VirusTotal for this.
Simply upload each archive to VirusTotal, wait for the scan to finish, and make sure the files do not contain any threats.
Before installing the plugins, it is recommended to create a backup of your website and database, especially if you are installing them on a live website with already configured templates, custom fields, or forms.
If errors occur after installation, check your WordPress version, Elementor version, PHP version, hosting limits, file permissions, and compatibility with the active theme.
Amelia is a professional WordPress plugin designed for online appointments, service bookings, and schedule management.
The plugin is suitable for beauty salons, medical clinics, fitness centers, consultations, educational projects, events, and other types of businesses that need a convenient online booking system.
Amelia helps automate the client booking process and reduces manual work. Clients can choose a service, date, and time, then submit a booking request without having to message or call an administrator.
This is especially convenient for businesses that receive many requests every day and want to make the booking process faster, clearer, and more professional.
Before installing the plugin, it is recommended to create a backup of your website and database. You should also check Amelia’s compatibility with your WordPress version, current theme, PHP version, and installed plugins.
If errors occur after installation, check your hosting settings, file permissions, PHP limits, and possible conflicts with other plugins.
Before installation, you can check the archive for viruses and malicious code using VirusTotal.
On this page, you can download for free the latest available version of the All-in-One WP Migration Unlimited Extension plugin that was distributed under the GPL license.
As of May 6, 2026, this version is fully functional and compatible with the current stable version of WordPress — WordPress 6.9.4.
To make the extension work correctly, you need to install two files:
Both files are available for free download. First, install and activate the main free version of the plugin, then install and activate the Unlimited Extension.
Before installing any ZIP archive on your website, we recommend checking the file yourself for viruses and malicious code. You can use the VirusTotal service for this.
Simply upload the archive to VirusTotal, wait for the scan to finish, and make sure the file does not contain any threats.
We recommend installing plugins only on websites to which you have full access, and always creating a backup of the website and database before installation.
If errors occur after installing the plugin, check your PHP version, hosting limits, file permissions, and compatibility with your current WordPress version.
Полностью бесплатный архив с оригинальными премиум- плагинами Elementor Pro и ElementsKit Pro .
Текущая версия Elementor Pro: 3.30.0
Текущая версия ElementsKit Pro: 3.8.9
Для вашей безопасности вы можете просканировать архив на VirusTotal :
A simple and customizable WordPress plugin that adds an animated WhatsApp button to your website.
IBM has announced significant progress in the field of quantum computing. For the first time, a system consisting of over 100 qubits has demonstrated the ability to deliver accurate results in complex calculations. The quantum computer named Eagle surpassed the capabilities of traditional supercomputers in solving a modeling problem.
Researchers conducted an experiment to compare the capabilities of a 127-qubit quantum computer and a supercomputer installed at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California. Both devices were tasked with calculating the most probable behavior of a set of particles, such as spin-coupled atoms arranged in a lattice.
Modern quantum systems are inherently noisy and prone to errors, which can significantly impact performance. This is due to the fragile nature of qubits and the noise that arises during their operations. Researchers developed error correction methods to enhance the accuracy of calculations.
They discovered that equations could be solved precisely for a certain number of particles. As the complexity of the calculation increased, approximation methods were required, and the results from both machines matched.
As the computation task became more challenging, the supercomputer reached its limit and could no longer handle it. However, the quantum computer Eagle continued to produce results. Although the team had no means to verify the accuracy of the results, they aligned with the expected calculations.
While this was the first instance of a quantum computer with over 100 qubits demonstrating accurate performance, researchers state that quantum superiority has not yet been achieved. IBM expects the technology to continue evolving and offering more capabilities in the coming years.
The history of computers dates back to the development of electronics and computer technology. The early computers were large and occupied entire rooms. However, over time, computers became more compact, powerful, and accessible.
An important milestone in the history of computers was the invention of the transistor in 1947, which replaced bulky vacuum tubes and significantly improved the performance and efficiency of computers.
Another significant breakthrough was the development of integrated circuits, which allowed for a large number of transistors to be packed onto a single chip. This led to the development of personal computers and the proliferation of computers in homes and offices.
Modern computers are powerful computing systems capable of processing large volumes of data and performing complex tasks.
Leonardo is the second most powerful supercomputer in Europe. It is located in a data center in the Italian city of Bologna. The system consists of three modules: for control, data storage, and computation. The computation module has a peak performance capacity of 174 petaflops, but expansion to 240 petaflops is planned.
LUMI is the most powerful supercomputer in Europe. It is built on the HPE Cray EX235a platform and has a performance of 309 petaflops. Each node contains a 64-core AMD EPYC Zen3 processor with 512 GB of RAM and 4 AMD Radeon Instinct MI250X accelerators with 128 GB of memory each.
Fugaku is the second most powerful computer in the world, with a performance of 442 petaflops. It was built by Fujitsu and is located at the RIKEN Center for Computational Science in Kobe, Japan. Fugaku uses Arm A64FX processors and has 7,630,848 cores.
Frontier is a supercomputer that has crossed the 1 exaflop threshold (1 quintillion operations per second). It is one of the most powerful computers in the world and nearly reaches 7 exaflops in artificial intelligence tasks. Frontier is installed at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the United States.
Artificial intelligence can help enhance your productivity as a graphic designer, but what are the best tools you can use? AI tools don’t always have to be novelty. While it can be fun to create a spooky version of your favorite pop star riding a unicorn in space, you can also benefit greatly from adding AI tools into your graphic design workflow. AI helps you save time and frustration on the small and annoying parts of the process, allowing you to focus on the big picture in your graphic design projects. Here are 13 AI tools to boost your graphic design workflow.
Khroma is an AI color tool built for designers. It sets a personalized algorithm based on the initial colors you choose. This algorithm generates infinite color combinations that relate to your chosen colors. If you’ve never chosen a color—such as yellow—it won’t appear in your AI-built algorithm unless you retrain Khroma that you like yellow.
Midjourney is a text-to-image AI tool that allows you to write a prompt and quickly visualize it. Using Midjourney’s Discord server, you can get four generated results per prompt. It's easy to use this AI tool, and we've written a guide for using Midjourney.
Adobe Sensei is a built-in Adobe tool that features across the Creative Cloud range, including content-aware fill, font recognition, automated color matching, and much more. While it isn’t one specific feature you can find and use, its integration to Adobe software elevates your entire graphic design workflow, no matter which program you’re working in.
Fontjoy is an open-source tool that helps create the best font combinations using font vector technology. The choice of typefaces to use can be paralyzing sometimes, but Fontjoy uses filters and generators to cut down your time searching and increase your time perfecting.
Nero AI Image Upscaler enlarges and upscales images in high quality. If you’ve got a pixelated image that you need in high resolution, use Nero AI to quickly enhance it.
Microsoft Designer is an AI-based template design tool. It works similarly to Canva and Adobe Express, but it is entirely run on AI. Use text prompts to find images and templates, generate color palettes, and more. This is a tool that can make your social media designs take a couple of minutes rather than a couple of hours.
RemoveBG is an AI tool that removes backgrounds. It’s as simple as that. Upload an image, and use Remove BG to remove the background, leaving a transparent background only.
Galileo AI calls itself the co-pilot for interface design. It creates UX/UI design using AI from just a text prompt written by you.
Using Flair AI you can turn text prompts into product photography. Just type how you want your product to be photographed—background, props, lighting, and themes—and Flair will generate the photo.
Uizard has a few helpful AI tools for UI designing, such as app and web design. You can use Uizard to design wireframes, mockups, and prototypes for web design, but its AI features make the tool shine.
Fronty uses AI to convert images into HTML and CSS code. You can create a functioning website in minutes without needing to be a web developer.
While ChatGPT isn’t a design tool itself, its powerful chatbot AI tool can be very helpful to any designer. You can use ChatGPT to create bulk designs in Canva or use ChatGPT to generate prompts for AI image generators.
Adobe Firefly is a beta tool for Adobe’s newest set of AI tools and features. Some of these AI tools have been integrated into Adobe products like Adobe Express Beta. While Firefly is still in beta mode, we can’t be sure how all the tools will be integrated.
With these 13 tools, you can be assured there’s an AI tool to help with your graphic design workflow. Graphic design software is changing more every year, and no longer do you have to put blood, sweat, and tears into every aspect of design. Use AI to share the burden of your least-liked design parts, so you can focus most on where your skills excel. AI doesn’t have to be the enemy of a graphic designer. Invite it to your workflow and make the best of it.
At some point, every company will need to hire a web designer. With 71% of businesses having a website, it's essential to create a site that reflects your brand, showcases your offerings, and engages customers.
When it comes to building a website, companies have three options: hiring an in-house web designer, working with a freelance web designer, or partnering with a web design agency. Each option has its pros and cons, and in this article, we'll help you evaluate them to make an informed decision.
An in-house web designer is a full-time employee who works exclusively for your company. They offer the most control and consistency but can be the most expensive option. In-house designers handle all aspects of website design and can easily adapt to your changing needs. They ensure a consistent look and feel, add new features as required, and align design elements with your brand identity.
The main benefit of an in-house web designer is the direct and continuous contact you have with them, making it easier to communicate ideas and ensure everyone is on the same page. This level of control and collaboration is ideal for large companies with specialized industries or specific design requirements.
However, hiring an in-house designer can be costly. You need to consider their salary, benefits, office space, and associated expenses. Additionally, if you don't have a continuous need for a designer, their idle time can be a financial burden.
A web design agency is a company that specializes in designing and developing websites for clients. They have dedicated teams with diverse skill sets and expertise, making them a comprehensive solution for web design needs. Working with an agency can be more cost-effective compared to an in-house designer.
One of the main benefits of hiring a web design agency is scalability. You only pay for the services you need, and as your requirements evolve, you can add specialized services like SEO, branding, or web maintenance. Agencies often work in collaboration with marketers and strategists, providing a holistic approach to your organization's marketing strategy.
However, web design agencies can be cost-prohibitive for small businesses and startups. Additionally, some agencies may not fully understand your product, service, or vision for your site. Communication and revisions may have limitations, and pivoting mid-project can be challenging. It's crucial to work within the agency's constraints and have a clear understanding of your goals and budget.
A freelance web designer is an independent professional who works on a project basis. Freelancers offer flexibility and cost-effectiveness compared to agencies. They are often responsive and adaptable, providing personalized attention to your project.
Hiring a freelance web designer allows you to engage them for as long as you need without the commitment of a full-time employee. Freelancers can quickly adapt to your business processes and offer faster response times, including odd hours if required.
However, the quality and reliability of freelancers can vary. Some freelancers may not have the same level of expertise or resources as agencies. It's important to thoroughly evaluate their portfolio and establish clear communication and expectations from the beginning.
Choosing between an in-house web designer, a web design agency, or a freelance web designer depends on your specific needs, budget, and level of control required. Large companies with specialized industries and continuous design needs may benefit from an in-house designer. Businesses with scalability and comprehensive marketing strategies can consider working with a web design agency. Freelancers are a suitable option for those seeking flexibility and cost-effectiveness.
Consider your goals, resources, and preferences to make the best decision for your web design needs.
Graphic design and web design are two distinct fields, each with its own set of tasks and responsibilities. When deciding between them, it is important to understand the skills and goals you want to pursue.
A graphic designer specializes in creating visual elements, including logos, banners, printed materials, vector graphics, and more. They also develop brand identities and creative solutions for advertising. Graphic designers focus on the creative process and crafting aesthetically appealing and impactful visual designs.
A web designer, on the other hand, is involved in designing websites, mobile applications, and interfaces. They create prototypes, banners for websites and social media, and are responsible for advertising creatives. Web designers consider user experience and interface design to ensure usability and effective interaction with websites and applications.
Both fields offer their own merits and provide different opportunities for career development and creativity.
Web designers typically earn higher salaries compared to graphic designers. This is because web designers often focus on user experience and design that directly impact the commercial goals of businesses. Their work revolves around creating effective websites and applications that attract users and generate profits.
Graphic designers, on the other hand, have more opportunities for creativity and self-expression. However, their work often requires a stronger marketing approach to demonstrate the commercial value of their designs.
Graphic designers generally have more freedom for creative expression and experimentation. They can develop unique visual identities, work with brand styles, and create visually appealing design concepts. Web designers, especially in larger companies, often rely on established design systems and standards established by graphic designers.
With the availability of affordable stock resources for icons and illustrations used in website creation, many businesses have reduced the need for regular graphic design services.
If you have a passion for creativity and a strong desire for self-expression, graphic design may be the better choice for you. Exploring illustration courses during your free time can be enjoyable and fulfilling.
If solving business challenges and achieving financial success are important to you, then web design may be the better fit. Web design requires an understanding of user experience, marketing aspects, and proficiency in web technologies.
Ultimately, the choice between graphic design and web design depends on your preferences, goals, and skill set. Both fields offer unique opportunities for creativity and career development, and it's important to find the area that inspires you and helps you achieve your goals.
In 2023, the world witnessed a revolutionary development in artificial intelligence (AI), leading to the implementation of strict rules aimed at ensuring safety, transparency, and environmental protection. The European Parliament has passed new legislation with the goal of protecting health, safety, fundamental rights, and democracy from the potential negative impacts of AI.
The new rules developed by the European Parliament prohibit the use of AI systems that pose an unacceptable level of risk to safety and society. This includes a ban on social scoring systems that classify people based on their behavior or personal characteristics.
Furthermore, providers and developers of AI systems are required to adhere to transparency, confidentiality, and non-discrimination. This ensures that AI developed and used in Europe meets high standards of safety and protection of human rights.
One important aspect of the new legislation is the consideration of the impact of AI on the environment. Powerful AI systems require significant computational power, resulting in high energy consumption. To reduce the negative environmental impact, the new rules aim to decrease energy consumption and improve the energy efficiency of AI systems.
Additionally, attention is given to the ethical and environmental aspects of AI. The use of AI for illegal extraction and utilization of natural resources, as well as activities that can harm ecosystems and biodiversity, is prohibited.
The prospects for the future development of AI are exciting. The new legislation paves the way for innovation, protection of human rights, and sustainable development. Scientific research and engineering efforts will be focused on creating AI systems that are not only efficient and reliable but also safe for people and the environment.
However, it is important to continue discussing and developing a regulatory framework for AI management, ensuring a balanced approach that takes into account technical capabilities and ethical principles. Only in this way can we fully unleash the potential of AI and utilize it for the benefit of humanity and our planet.
In 2023, information technology is experiencing a revolution thanks to advancements in the field of artificial intelligence (AI). Neural networks are astounding us with their ability to learn, make decisions, and even create software on their own. But, like in any revolution, there is a dark side to progress.
Leading AI developers and investors, including Elon Musk, have raised questions about the potential risks associated with this rapidly evolving technology. In several public statements since March of this year, Musk has voiced his concern that AI may get out of control, intervening in decision-making and prohibiting its deactivation.
One of the latest developments in artificial intelligence is the creation of programs that even experienced programmers cannot decipher. This poses questions of safety and ethics, as an uncontrollable AI could pose a threat.
Musk calls for the introduction of restrictions on AI use, not waiting until something terrible happens and it's too late. This positive view of artificial intelligence, capable of easing hard mental work and even speeding up scientific work, should not overshadow the potential risks.
At the same time, AI offers advantages in the automation of intellectual labor. With the ability to properly task neural networks, scientific activity can be sped up by 10 times. This can greatly ease our workload, freeing us from the need to spend time on manual collection and systematization of information.
Thus, we stand on the threshold of a new turn in the development of our civilization. However, with the expansion of artificial intelligence capabilities, we need to care about safety before we find ourselves in a situation that is no longer possible to control.
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