Showing posts with label magento 2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magento 2. Show all posts

15 February 2021

Developer Connection - Knowledge is power

It is widely believed that Sir Francis Bacon first spoke the famous words "knowledge is power!”

This famous phrase has been mentioned and written in emails, memos, board meetings and conferences all over the world! But when it comes to the traditional market place, this widely accepted and repeated philosophy seems to be missing in action.

 

Common sense would dictate that the more information available about a project and or a developer beforehand would increase the success rate and satisfaction of all parties. Though it is also fair to say that you may not want to give every detail of your project away or need to reveal your school exam results on your CV, there is a lack of vital information in some cases. I wish we were talking about trivial information here but we're not! Necessary things like budget, time scale and availability are all extremely important in the development process and yet so often these things are missing from project specs. 


So who’s to blame for this? Is it the service? Is it the clients, store owners or developers fault? Truth be told, the mess belongs to everyone! There are store owners and clients unwilling to give specific details on projects, things like deadlines or budget, developers who don’t give realistic timescales in the fear of not securing a project and services that encourage this environment of confusion and frustration by not asking parties to provide essential information. Too often you see badly written project specs that developers are tripping over each other to "win", writing proposal after proposal filled with unrealistic promises while services are happy to let this happen as long as you use them.

 

Enter Developer Connection where we have created a quick, easy and detailed project creation form for store owners to fill out. This project creation form is specifically designed to provide developers with all the information they need by making many of the questions mandatory, things like "How long do you expect the project to take?" and "What version of Magento is the project for?" 

Likewise, there is a process where developers can input their availability, qualifications and specialist areas to help clients choose the best developer for their project. Developers won't need to write endless proposals either, because their developer profile will be their proposal so as long as they create a great, eye-catching profile, they'll have no problems.

 

Next week, we’ll dive into the finer details of this process. For now, we’ll leave you with this. If knowledge truly is power and the traditional market place is content to leave itself and it’s users in a position of informational drought, maybe it's time for something new? Come and join us at Developerconnection.co.uk and take back your power!

 

Thank you for letting us be a part of your day, drop us a comment or join us on our social media sites listed below, we would love to hear from you, but until then stay safe and have a great day.

You can also join all the fun on our various social media profiles
Facebook - facebook.com/husseycoding
Twitter - twitter.com/husseycoding
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/hussey-coding

Sign up to developer connection at www.developerconnection.co.uk
Facebook - facebook.com/DeveloperConnection
Twitter - twitter.com/devconnectionuk
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/developer-connection

11 January 2021

Developer Connection - Hire the right UK Magento developers for your project.

In case you didn't notice, we recently overhauled our whole website and branding and to celebrate, over the next few week's we'll be taking a fresh look at everything Developer Connection has to offer both Magento developers and store owners alike.

Developer Connection is purposefully designed to be a Magento specific marketplace for developers and store owners to enjoy fast, easy, professional experiences while building long-lasting business relationships with others using the service.

There are many other services out there that claim to have this same vision while claiming to be different and be the best. Though we're not here to claim these things, we believe that we offer both clients and developers something unique, fresh and unrivalled.

We'll be making direct comparisons between Developer Connection and some of the more popular services in an upcoming blog, for now, we're going to look at the wider traditional market place to see how Developer Connection is different in 3 key areas.

One of the biggest problems with all of these services is hidden fees! Hidden fees are where the majority of these services make their money. Either by splitting the cost between freelancer and client or palming off the total amount to one or other. There's no escaping the reality that someone IS paying more than they NEED to, to the benefit of the service providers.
Developer Connection has NO hidden fees. Everything is upfront and there for you to see before you push that payment button.

Another issue with the traditional marketplace is communication.
Services will do everything they can to get you to use their service for everything and package it with a bow under the guise of convenience. What many people are unaware of is the small print that says if you connect with your chosen developer or client using any tools outside of the ones the service provides, then you are likely to be barred from the service or have your account permanently deleted.
We hate this! It creates this atmosphere of distrust and pressure between client and freelancer and is very "big brother is watching".
At Developer Connection, all we do is connect people, so you are free to use the tools you're used to and communicate outside of our service.

There's also the amount of information that's required by the service.
Many of these services require minimal information on projects, pricing and deadlines and often leaves developers chasing project details and store owners waiting for results. This again creates this friction between all parties involved.
As a development company ourselves, we understand the need for precise and clear information so created a quick but detailed way for store owners to communicate their needs and for developers to showcase their abilities and communicate their availability to clients.

Over the next few weeks, we'll be taking a closer look at these 3 issues and more as we compare Developer Connection with the other services out there in the traditional marketplace.
Thank you for letting us be a part of your day. If you have any questions about Developer Connection, please feel free to contact us using the details below. Until then, stay safe and have a great day.

You can also join all the fun on our various social media profiles
Facebook - facebook.com/husseycoding
Twitter - twitter.com/husseycoding
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/hussey-coding

Sign up to developer connection at www.developerconnection.co.uk
Facebook - facebook.com/DeveloperConnection
Twitter - twitter.com/devconnectionuk
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/developer-connection

10 August 2020

M2.4.0 Fixes

Hello and welcome back to another edition of the

Hussey Coding blog

 

Last week we took a look at some of the highlights from the recent M2.4.0 release and this week we'll be briefly looking at all the issues that were fixed. I say briefly as the majority of this update are fixes, as you are about to see. As always look out for the "*" symbol letting you know that this is a Commerce edition only update/fix.

Magento 2.4.0 brings hundreds of fixes to the table, so many that it would be impossible to go over them in one blog. Here is the list of all the areas which the update has fixed. 

 

AdminGWS*

Adobe Stock Integration

Analytics*

 

Backend

Bundle products

 

Cache

Cart and checkout

Cart price rule

Catalog (some *)

Catalog Rule*

Catalog widget

Cleanup

CMS content

Configurable products

Cookies (some *)

Custom customer attributes (some *)

Customer

Customer segment*

 

Directory

Downloadable

Dynamic block (formerly banner)*

 

EAV

Email

 

Frameworks

 

General fixes (some *)

Gift cards*

Gift wrapping*

Google Tag Manager*

GraphQL

Grouped products

 

Images (some *)

Import/export

Index

Infrastructure

 

Layered navigation

Logging*

 

Media Gallery

Media Storage

 

New Relic*

Newsletter

 

Orders

 

Payment methods

Performance

Pricing

Product video

 

Reports

Return Merchandise Authorizations (RMA)*

Reviews

Rewards*

 

Sales

Sales Rule

Search

Shipping

Sitemap

Staging*

Store

Swatches

 

TargetRule

Tax (some*)

Test

Theme

Translation and locales

 

UI (some*)

URL

URL rewrites

 

VAT

Visual Merchandiser*

 

Web API framework

Wishlist (some*)

WYSIWYG

 

There are a few remaining known issues still to be fixed but in fairness, I think we can all agree that Magento has gotten a lot done since 2.3.5 was released. You can check out all the details of the above fixes and the outstanding issues by following this link HERE.


Thank you for joining us again today, we appreciate your support in reading these blogs and ask that you like, follow and share them on your favourite social media platforms.

If you would like to get in touch all of our details are below but until then, stay safe and have a great day.

 

You can also join all the fun on our various social media profiles
Facebook - facebook.com/husseycoding
Twitter - twitter.com/husseycoding
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/hussey-coding

Sign up to developer connection at www.developerconnection.co.uk
Facebook - facebook.com/DeveloperConnection
Twitter - twitter.com/devconnectionuk
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/developer-connection

3 August 2020

Magento 2.4.0

Hi everyone and welcome back to another edition of

the Hussey Coding blog


Recently Magento released their 2.4 updates and so in today's blog we'll be taking a quick look at the new, the old and what that means for you.

Firstly you need to know that this is not comprehensive coverage of all that is contained within the release notes rather an overview of them. There is so much in these release notes it would take a long time to cover it all and of late Magento are throwing these updates out faster than a Cowboy through a saloon window.


Together with new features being introduced and old ones being shown the door, there were a TON of fixes in this update! In fact, 70-75% of all the M2.4 updates are for fixing the platform. And so we are going to tackle them in next weeks blog and lastly when you see this symbol "*" this indicates that the features mentioned are for M2 Commerce edition only. With all that said it's time to dive into ...

There are over 30 security fixes and improvements in this release, including two-factor authentication for all admin accounts as a requirement. This is awesome! The admin panel is the heart of your store/business is when it comes to Magento so, the more security you have, the better. And what's brilliant about this is that it's mandatory, you cannot turn this off in the settings or disable it in any other way. Though it is optional for regular Magento accounts we would recommend, as a house rule, you make it mandatory for those accounts too.

There's also some new multi-factor authentication that has been added to cloud SSH access on Magento Commerce Cloud. Unlike the two-factored authentication on the admin panel, this is not the default so you will need to go and turn it on manually for each project.


Speaking of defaults, Elasticsearch 7.6 is now Magento's default catalogue search engine for both open source and Commerce editions. This means that when you upgrade to M2.4, you will automatically install Elasticsearch 7.6x which now also supports the partial word feature previously seen in MySQL. Elasticsearch 5.x and 6.x are no longer supported and, Elasticsearch 2.x has been completely removed along with the MySQL catalogue search engine.


PHP 7.4 and PHPUnit9.x have been introduced, and all extensions in the Magento marketplace now need to confirm that they are compatible. PHP 7.1 and 7.2 along with PHPUnit 6.5 are on their way out after having been depreciated. With this in mind, you should check your installed extensions to avoid any loss of service, issues or downtime. Page Builder* now also supports PHP 7.4.


A new feature to be introduced in M2.4 is seller-assisted shopping. This new feature allows the admin to log into customer accounts on their behalf to help with things like order placements, troubleshooting and whatever else they may need. All sessions where the admin has logged in will be destroyed once the admin logs out and, they have no access to customer passwords. On its own, this feature is exciting. However, coupled with the fact that it was firstly a community extension that is now part of the core code makes it even more special and noteworthy.


Finding Adobe stock preview images in the media gallery using Adobe's stock integration v2.0 makes it easier than ever for you to license stock preview images. The media gallery its self has received an update now working up to 30X faster than it did before. It's worth bearing in mind that extensions made before M2.4 may not work with the new media gallery so remember to check any extensions you may have. The new stock integration also brings with it some inventory management enhancements that support features like in-store pickup, product bundles and updates to GraphQL and PWA studio. 


Other enhancements include things like making Template filter strict mode mandatory, disabling Data rendering for UI data providers, improved MySQL 8.0 which in turn allows merchants to deploy MariaDB 10.4 (Magento recommend that you update to both MySQL 8.0 and MariaDB 10.4 due to their superior improvements over past incarnations), the Zend Framework dependencies migration to the Laminas project in preparation for the complete removal of Zend, a 25-30% improvement to quick add-to-cart performance, improvements to the B2B order approval workflow* and overall improvements to Amazon pay, dotdigital*, Braintree payments, Klarna, Vertex and Yotpo extensions.

It's also important to note that the following have all been removed from the core code, Signifyd fraud protection, Braintree module Authorize.Net, eWay*, CyberSource* and Worldpay payment*.


For the full rundown of what M2.4 has to offer, check out the release notes here

- M2.4 release notes

Thank you for taking the time to join us today and watch out next week for part 2 of our M2.4 update overview. Until then, stay safe and have a great day.


You can also join all the fun on our various social media profiles
Facebook - facebook.com/husseycoding
Twitter - twitter.com/husseycoding
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/hussey-coding

Sign up to developer connection at www.developerconnection.co.uk
Facebook - facebook.com/DeveloperConnection
Twitter - twitter.com/devconnectionuk
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/developer-connection

13 July 2020

What is the Magento association?

Hey everyone and welcome back to another blog by

Hussey Coding


During the Imagine conference of 2018, the newly formed Magento association was announced to the world. Now I don't know about you but the association is something I hear about from time to time but I'm not really sure what it is, what it does or why it's important which is eventually what lead to the writing of this blog.

The first question we have to ask is what is the Magento Association?

The association is made up of members of the Magento community, developers, store owners, partners, masters, clients, basically, anyone and everyone from the Magento community who wants to join. The association is there to listen to the Magento community, help it to grow and to help it make a difference in the Magento ecosystem as a whole. How does it do that? By dedicating its self to supporting and building up the things that make the Magento community great already!

For example, maybe you tuned into this year's online Meet Magento UK from a part of the world that doesn't have any Magento events and you came away with a great vision and passion for your own Meet Magento type event for your country, the association should be one of your first ports of call.


Bosting over 1700 community members from over 68 counties and 6 continents the Magento association is huge and as such needs some form of management to help guide the ship, this management team is made up of board members, staff and members of the original task force formed to create the association back in 2018.

So who are they?



Becoming an association member is simple, just head to their website magentoassociation.org and sign up, it's free to join and comes with a few perks too, association members will save 10% on all training and certification services offered by Magento U, serve on a committee and contribute to the development of year-round programming for the Magento association, get exclusive benefits and discounts from select Magento association partners and if that wasn't enough they also get exclusive member registration savings at Magento organised conferences and events.


As it stands there still isn't a whole ton of information out there, much of the site seems a little repetitive in the way of content and after a quick search on social media there seems to be a 50/50 attitude to the association, which seems to stem from an apparent lack of direction from the association as to how it achieves its own goals. However, it is vitally important to remember that the association is still new in many respects and since its inception, we have gone through an incredible amount as a community and a planet.


Internally, Magento association members you are now able to vote on the first of 3 questions 

  • What do we want to be called?
  • What do we want and need from our association?
  • How do we want to collaborate with each other?

and the answers to these questions will hopefully help both the association and its membership to find their feet in the coming weeks and months.


Overall the association seems to be an extension of the Magento community ecosystem, its goals are admirable and genuine and given a bit more time we think it could turn out to be another great resource for the community invest in.


What are your thoughts on the Magento association? Maybe it's new to you or maybe you have been signed up since day 1, are you in favour of it or against it? head on over to our social media platforms listed below and tell us all about it, we would love to hear from you!

As always we would like to thank you for taking time out of your day to read our blog, until next time, stay safe and have a great day.


You can also join all the fun on our various social media profiles
Facebook - facebook.com/husseycoding
Twitter - twitter.com/husseycoding
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/hussey-coding

Sign up to developer connection at www.developerconnection.co.uk
Facebook - facebook.com/DeveloperConnection
Twitter - twitter.com/devconnectionuk
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/developer-connection


6 July 2020

Can I still run an M1 store?

Good morning everyone and welcome back to another edition of

the Hussey Coding blog

As many of you will know all official support for Magento 1 came to an end earlier this year (2020). This means that Adobe will no longer be devoting any resources whatsoever to the M1 platform going forward. In their minds, there's no more Magento 1 and Magento 2, there's just Magento.
And while we here at Hussey Coding fully support migration to M2, today we ask the question ...

If you've been using Magento since the start, then your store is quickly coming up on it's 12th, even 13th birthday. By now, you'll have become overly familiar with the way M1 works, what it can do for you, you'll have found and implemented all your favourite extensions and you probably have your trusted devs on speed dial, ready to help with new features or problematic issues. With all of that taken into account, I think it's perfectly understandable to want to stay with M1. But can you still successfully run your business using it? 


Of course, the short answer to the question is yes, you can still run your store using M1. In all honesty, you can probably go for a while without any issues at all. However, that won't last forever! Below we're going to outline some of our concerns for the stores that stay on M1.


Security

This is the big one because it not only affects your store but every part of your business, even the parts arent online! Let's be clear, you, as a store owner, have always been responsible for the security of your store, however, that mostly revolved around your ability to make sure the latest security patch was installed, that is no longer an option as there are no more security patches and so now you have more responsibility in regards to store security.

Adobe has made it quite clear that it will not be responding to any M1 security issues, meaning that you are very much on your own now and a prime target for Cybercriminals, the reality is that the further away from June 2020 we get, the easier it will be for Cybercriminals to detect, infiltrate and exploit the gaps in your M1's store security.


Extensions

If you want to keep any M1 extensions, then you will have needed to download them by the 7th of July 2020. Adobe actively removed all M1 extensions from the Magento Marketplace after this date.

In addition to this, after the 6th of August 2020, they were all removed from the Magento repository. If you need a new M1 extension now, then you'll need to find someone to custom-build you one. And don't forget that you are responsible for ensuring that all extensions installed now meet your security standards and don't compromise your store.


Third-party vendors

Traditionally as a store owner, you are, or at least should be, quite careful about who you use as a third party vendor. Picking the wrong vendors can lead to difficulties, loss of reputation and even security risks. With the M1 platform's code becoming more and more diluted and varied from one merchant to the next as adjustments and custom-built extensions are added this may become an issue for third party vendors. Suppliers, contractors, payment gateways and other third-party services will probably stick around for a while, but as time goes on, we predict that more and more third-party vendors will start refusing to work with merchants using the outdated M1 platform. Why? Well simply because the further away we get from M1's EOL the more of a risk the platform becomes to the vendor's businesses, reputation and security.


Cost

In the short term, nothing will cost you any more than usual, until there is a problem or your favourite extension stops working.

The reality is, even if you have an internal developer or dev team, they're not going to want to be working with old code and methods forever. They're going to be learning new languages, methods and coding practices because that's where the money is! And the further we get from June 2020, the more specialised an area M1 code becomes so inevitably cost will go up as fewer and fewer developers want to work with the older M1 system.

Not only that but a year from now when you want to revamp your site or store then you'll need to find someone to custom-build it for you, incurring more cost again. Security and maintenance will cost you extra and, as we will see in a moment as your expenses are going up, your income will most likely go down.


Staying competitive

You'll need to take into account how crowded your market is and how competitive you want to be. If you are a small, bespoke store that doesn't see much competition, then this may not be a problem for you, however, for many of us in the retail space, 2020 has been a brutal year!

Much of it has just been about surviving and staying open as opposed to focusing on being top of the Google search list. Though being competitive is the last thing on your mind, you need to factor competition into your plans for the future. When we start to see some semblance of normal again, you may find that your industry space has been filling up.

Even as new technologies become available, it will grow increasingly difficult to integrate them into your business. Costing you extra to get them up and running, all while your competitors, both old and new, gain the edge by leveraging new innovations and processes.


Support

Like we said above, there will be support out there, for now! Vendors won't drop you tomorrow, and your customers won't abandon your store overnight. However, the longer we go on, the smaller and smaller that pool of support will become. M1 developers will be in short supply, and even generic M1 stores will become unrecognisable as stores will require unique code and systems to keep them running. Until eventually, the M1 store you started with isn't an M1 any more. 


So what's the conclusion? Can you still run an M1 store now that EOL has come and gone? Yes but not for long, eventually you are going to have to move or migrate. M2, in our opinion, is your best option and though it will cost you a lot upfront, migration will save you more down the line.

If you're looking to migrate to M2 or you're looking for continuing support for your existing M1 store, then head over to Developerconnection.co.uk now! There you'll find developers and developer teams who are skilled in every area of Magento, ready and eager to help you out.

Thank you for joining us today. We hope you found this article helpful and would really appreciate your further support by liking and sharing this across your favourite social media platforms.
Until then, stay safe and have a great day.


You can also join all the fun on our various social media profiles
Facebook - facebook.com/husseycoding
Twitter - twitter.com/husseycoding
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/hussey-coding

Sign up to developer connection at www.developerconnection.co.uk
Facebook - facebook.com/DeveloperConnection
Twitter - twitter.com/devconnectionuk
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/developer-connection

18 May 2020

Magento 2.3.5 Pt.2

Hi everyone and welcome back to another blog by
Hussey Coding 

Last week we shared part 1 of our Magento 2.3.5 update looking at all of the highlights that Magento shared with us. This week we'll be taking a look at all the bug fixes and issues left to resolve in our blog... 


Before we begin we need to mention that these release notes were published for both Open Source and Commerce editions separately, having said that, there really aren't that many differences between the two and so to avoid confusion, when you see the * symbol, this will indicate that these are features only for Commerce and Commerce cloud.

We also won't be going through each fix individually as Magento is boasting hundreds of fixes in this update and we'd be here for a very long time if we tried to cover them all. Below you will find a list of the areas that were fixed, how many fixes there were in each area and a look at the issues still outstanding.

Installation, upgrade, deployment - 3
Adobe stock integration - 4
Analytics* - 2
Bundle products - 7
Cache - 1
Cart and checkout - 3
Catalog - 19
CatalogInventory - 1
Catalog Price Rule - 2
Catalog widget - 2
Cleanup and simple code refactoring - 6
CMS content - 2
Configurable products - 3
Cron - 2
Custom customer attribute - 1
Customer - 5
Customer segment* - 3
Dynamic block (formerly banner)* - 1
EAV - 2
Email - 2
Frameworks - 8
JavaScript framework - 3
General fixes - 14
Gift cards* - 2
Gift wrapping* -  3
Google Tag Manager* - 3
Import/export - 16
Index - 1
Infrastructure - 5
Inventory - 3
Layered navigation* - 1
Logging* - 4
Newsletter - 1
Payment methods - 12
Performance - 3
Return Merchandise Authorizations (RMA)* - 5
Reviews - 2
Rewards* - 1
Sales - 5
Sales Rule - 2
Shipping - 7
Sitemap - 3
Store - 2
Swagger - 1
Swatches - 1
Target Rule* - 2
Tax - 3
Testing - 1
Theme - 2
Translation and locales - 2
UI - 15
URL rewrites - 2
Visual Merchandiser* - 1
Web API framework - 3
Wishlist - 1
WYSIWYG - 3

Issues still to be resolved with Open source edition

Issue: Magento prompts customers to log in by displaying this message: This account is not confirmed. Click here to resend confirmation email. The Click here link in this message should open the Send confirmation link page, but is currently inactive.
Workaround: The Resend account confirmation email link issue patch is now available for this issue. See Resend account confirmation email link issue patch for Magento 2.3.5. A permanent fix will be available in Magento 2.3.6, which is scheduled for release in Q4 2020.

Issue: Magento 2.3.5 does not support upgrading using the Web Setup Wizard from deployments running Magento 2.3.3 or earlier without first manually updating dependencies for magento/updater. You can upgrade using the Web Setup Wizard without issue from Magento 2.3.4 to Magento 2.3.5.
Workaround: Users should run the following commands before upgrading using the Web Setup Wizard:
cd update
&& composer update

Issue: The Compare Products feature does not work as expected in deployments with multiple store views. When a user tries to compare products from multiple store views and one product has an empty value for a comparable attribute, Magento displays a corrupted Compare Products page.
Workaround: Comparable attribute values cannot be empty. Merchants should specify non-empty values for comparable product attributes or use the default storeview value for the attribute. A fix will be available in Magento 2.3.6, which is scheduled for release in Q4 2020.

Issue: The storefront checkout workflow will not display any payment method that has been enabled for only specific countries with the exception of these payment methods: PayPal, Braintree, Klarna, and Amazon Pay.
Workaround: No workaround for this issue is available in Magento 2.3.5. A fix will be available in Magento 2.3.6, which is scheduled for release in Q4 2020.

Issue: An error message appears when a shopper attempts to change their credit card from the payments widget while checking out with Amazon Pay. The shopper cannot successfully complete checkout by ignoring the error and proceeding to checkout. To resolve this issue and remove the error, see Amazon Pay credit card change error to apply the fix.

Issue: You cannot complete an order to be shipped to multiple addresses if one of the ordered products is a virtual product. Currently, when you check out, Magento successfully places the order for the physical products, but the virtual product order is empty.
Workaround: A fix will be available in Magento 2.3.6, which is scheduled for release in Q4 2020.


Issue: The system message displayed by Magento after a bulk action (for example, a mass product update or import/export) displays a count of 0 instead of an accurate count of the products affected by the bulk action.
Workaround: A fix will be available in Magento 2.3.6, which is scheduled for release in Q4 2020.

Issues still to be resolved in Commerce/Cloud edition

Issue: Magento throws an error on the Order Summary section of the checkout workflow when a customer removes store credit after first selecting it as a payment method for the entire order.
Workaround: Customers can refresh the Order page. A fix will be available in Magento 2.3.6, which is scheduled for release in Q4 2020.

As we said above, this is not meant to be a comprehensive look at this latest update, rather an overview of the fixes and issues to help you quickly identify what's been fixed or what still needs doing however we are working on something a little more in depth so please stay tuned for that.

Thank you for joining us today at the Hussey Coding blog, we appreciate your support and ask that you help us further by liking, sharing and showing us some love on our social media profiles, listed below.
Also head on over to Developerconnection.co.uk today to take advantage of our FREE project creation discount for store owners and our HALF PRICE developers subscription offer, both automatically available if you sign up now.
Join us on Monday when we'll be starting a new series but until then, stay safe and have a great day.

Want to contact Hussey Coding? here's how
Mail us at info@husseycoding.co.uk
Visit us at www.husseycoding.co.uk

You can also join all the fun on our various social media profiles
Facebook - facebook.com/husseycoding
Twitter - twitter.com/husseycoding
LinkedIn - linkedin.com/company/hussey-coding

Sign up to developer connection at www.developerconnection.co.uk
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Twitter - twitter.com/devconnectionuk
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