It might be possible, I have done this on Windows in the past with powershell and Chocolatey.
Worked great for a shop of 50+ developers needing to take a standard IT image and make it into a proper dev setup without 20 pages of instructions.
Have you considered a multi USB dock so that you have one source of where your cables come out of as opposed to having them all connected to your MB? Mount it under your desk, towards the back and have the cables exit the back of the desk, then something like the orbitkey desk mat with magnetic cable organizer to manage the cables from becoming tangled on the top of your desk:
https://www.orbitkey.com/products/orbitkey-desk-mat?variant=32750570471520
Some under desk cable trays help tidy up the excess cables too:
Merchant of record (MoR) has to handle plenty of aspects related to electronic payment acceptance, including:
• Maintaining financial liability for the goods sold
• Overseeing payment compliance while mitigating risk
• Managing transactions, refunds, cancellations, and disputes
• Handling chargebacks and fraud resolution
• Responsible for sales & import taxes
• Adhering to customer data compliance
• Avoiding the sale of illegal, prohibited, or counterfeit products or services
• Maintaining a direct relationship with payment service providers
• Providing billing-related customer support.
PayProGlobalcombines all of them, so the SaaS businesses could focus on their product. If you have any questions or need advice schedule a free consultation.
​
Register for the developer portal on developer.tomtom.com and use promo code DEVSTYLER for free credits to tinker with our Maps APIs. Feel free to ask our developer advocates any questions on the stream
Hold that thought. Most devs will tell you that Python isn't the best choice for game development, however, thanks to Panda3D (https://www.panda3d.org) that's no longer true. When you check out the showcases you'll see that people are able to use Python and Panda3D to make really cool 3D games ! Panda3D is the only open-source game engine that has been ported to Python. So yeah ... you can go with Python if you fancy making cool games. Btw latest news say that games made with Panda3D will be deployable to Android and iOS so you can push your game onto smartphone as well.
I think Webflow is a great tool for landing pages. https://webflow.com/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=search&utm_campaign=general-paid-branded&utm_term=keyword-targeting&utm_content=branded-ads&gclid=Cj0KCQiA2uH-BRCCARIsAEeef3lWX3UcHxz7wSH79mBPrl0kGlAuG5MOj1mOlMhS3XaKcmIhwZ4pbeA...
It is very powerful (perhaps too powerful), and may require someone with knowledge of it to help build it. Squarespace is another suggestion and you could easily use that without prior experience.
And finally, This sounds like a pretty simple landing page. Maybe you don’t need a tool at all??
Frankly you should move away from Wordpress altogether.
We use a website builder called webflow.com. It's easy to get started with, quite customisable and no-code.
You may find greater flexibility in the future as your needs for more integration arise.
PS: I am not affiliated with webflow whatsoever. Just a satisfied customer. We started on Wix.com, and quickly ran into issues of website loading speed and performance (desktop and mobile) + some dodgy plugins that would crash most of the time. Made the switch to webflow in a matter of 3 days (replicating our website from scratch). Performances of the website were without comparison.
yea it's what i thought it was -- images are too large and not compressed enough.
https://gtmetrix.com/reports/infogears.com.br/pAa3xayg
Not to say there isn't plenty more you can do to improve it, but gtmetrix is a great start.
By the way, I'm a 13 year old who just got into web design a year ago. After learning some php, html, css and js, I looked into apps. And that's how this was made :) https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.quickiechat.quickiechat