Math and Multimedia’s charity work

This site has exist and has helped a lot of people for over a year. If it has helped you, your help would also be appreciated.

You can now use the Paypal donate button at the right. I am planning to do charity work, and part of the donations will be used to buy schoolbags, books, and notebooks for poor kids here in the Philippines.

Thank you!

WordPress Tutorial 7 – Changing the Theme of Your Blog

From the previous tutorials, we have learned the basics on creating and editing blogs.  In this short tutorial, we are going to learn how to change the theme of your blog.  The theme composed of the general appearance of your blog including the header picture, the color, menus, widgets,  font, background, etc.

To change theme of your blog, do the following:

  1. Log in to your WordPress account.
  2. Go to your Dashboard.
  3. Expand the Appearance panel located at the lower left side of your Dashboard window  and then select Themes (see first figure).
  4. This will display the different themes as shown in the second figure.
  5. You can choose your own theme later, but for the sake of this tutorial series, try to choose first the Inove theme which I am using. You can search for in in the Search box.
  6. When you have found the Inove Theme, press the Activate link.
  7. Now, try to play with different themes, and choose what is suited for your blog. Each theme has its own characteristic. In later tutorials, however, you will be requested to switch back to Inove, so that you can follow the tutorials easily.

Math and Multimedia Carnival # 7

Enjoy the Mathematics and Multimedia Carnival #7 via Keeping Math Simple.

Math and Multimedia Carnival # 7 Welcome to the 7th edition of Mathematics and Multimedia blog carnival. Before we begin Carnival 7, let’s look at some of the trivias about the number seven: The Millennium Prize Problems are seven problems in mathematics that were stated by the Clay Mathematics Institute in 2000. Currently, six of the problems remain unsolved. Seven, the fourth prime number, is not only a Mersenne prime (since 23 − 1 = 7) but also a double Mersenne prime since i … Read More

via Keeping Mathematics Simple

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