In the process of engineering software and providing robust
hosting and other professional services, Carbonsoft embarks on
solving problems or other activities which we feel others will
either find interesting or be use.
Here we share some of these experiences.
Please use the navigation items or search bar to the right of
the browser to find articles of interest.
Wednesday November 11, 2015
When purchasing an Umbraco package from Carbonsoft, we take care of the hard bits, leaving some final steps for you to complete your Umbraco installation.
Written by
Richard Bowers
at 00:00
Sunday August 19, 2012
All our hosting packages are now deploying Umbraco 4.8.1.
Written by
Carbonsoft LLP
at 00:00
Wednesday August 1, 2012
Resolving the Umbraco Simple Starter Kit with Designit Green or Friendly Ghost Skin Object reference not set to an instance of an object Error.
Written by
Richard Bowers
at 21:35
Tuesday July 31, 2012
This is the first in a series of articles explaining how to get up and running with Membership in Umbraco.
It is quite common to require an area of a website that users must logon to in order to access content or functionality. Umbraco provides support for this through its membership functionality which supports the standard ASP.NET Membership Provider model. This means the "out of the box" asp.net controls can be used to create, login, manage and generally work with your Umbraco members.
Written by
Jonathan Kay
at 21:35
Sunday July 29, 2012
Our Standard and Gold hosting packages now come with Website Panel, a feature rich and established online control panel that allows full control of your hosting environment. The intuitive and easy to use interface allows you to setup or change host headers - change your primary domain or with our Gold package, run multiple website and domains in one with Umbraco multisite. You can also add or remove FTP users and reset passwords, upload and manage files directly from your browser and setup custom file permission. Managing your Umbraco instance has never been easier!
Written by
Richard Bowers
at 22:45