Send Images to RSS
Send Images to RSS bridges the gap between large websites and small emails, by replacing images in your feed with smaller, email friendly images, and attempting to add markup which email clients can handle. Between larger monitors, retina screens, and better image optimization, the images we serve up on our websites are larger than they’ve ever been. RSS to email services such as MailChimp, however, are constrained to what email clients can display, which is small, small, small. And although it’s possible to try to style images with a max-width in your emails, not all clients will honor it (I’m looking at you, Outlook). Send Images to RSS makes it easy to create beautiful, email friendly RSS campaigns, with minimal setup required, regardless of your feed setup. Full Text RSS Feeds If your site’s RSS feed is set to Full Text, this plugin makes sure your emails look more like your website: Replace overly large images with email friendly size images. Convert galleries from thumbnails to full width images. Add email friendly styling/alignment to your images. Summary Text Feeds If you’ve used Summaries as your RSS feed settings, this plugin has not been for you. Until now. As of 3.0.0, Send Images to RSS brings the awesome to you, too. Here’s the magic for your Summary feed: Add the post’s featured image to your excerpt. Choose the size and alignment. If no featured image is set, the plugin will use the first image uploaded to the post. Set a custom length for your RSS summary/excerpt. Pick the number of words you want your summary to have, and the plugin will aim for that, but with the added bonus of making sure the final sentence is complete. If you add a manual excerpt to your post, because you like to have full control, the plugin will properly use that instead. Automatically add a custom “read more” link to the end of every post summary, to keep your feed pointed back to your site. Known (non)Issues This plugin should work with any theme. Some themes and plugins do modify the feed for their own purposes. Where possible, I’ve tried to account for them: For summary feeds, the Yoast SEO RSS link is removed (the full text feed and front end output are not changed). For summary feeds, the excerpt filter added by the Woo Canvas theme is removed (the full text feed and front end output are not changed). For summary feeds, this plugin will replace the image settings for Display Featured Image for Genesis for versions 2.3.0 and later (because this plugin is smarter). If you’re using Display Featured Image for Genesis 2.2.2 or lower, this plugin will concede graciously. But you should update, please. For full text feeds, this plugin will not duplicate featured images if they are being added by Display Featured Image for Genesis–you will want to disable that feature in Display Featured Image for Genesis. NOTE: it is up to you to check that your feed output is still working, especially in your email system of choice, once it’s installed. I’ve attempted to set it up to handle XHTML or HTML5, and function even if your feed is wonky, but please double check, and let me know if you have issues, and if so, what specifically they are. Props Special thanks to Gretchen Louise for her summary feed contributions. Spanish translation offered by Web Hosting Hub
Top keywords
- feed12×2.03%
- images12×2.03%
- rss10×1.69%
- image9×1.53%
- summary9×1.53%
- email8×1.36%
- featured7×1.19%
- full7×1.19%
- featured image6×1.02%
- feeds6×1.02%
- text6×1.02%
- add5×0.85%
Smooth SMTP
Smooth SMTP gives you full control over how WordPress sends email. Configure SMTP as your primary sending method, set up a fallback for when things go wrong, get notified through your preferred channels, and keep a detailed log of every email your site sends. Primary Sending Method (SMTP) Configure any SMTP provider as your primary sending method. If you leave SMTP disabled, WordPress will continue using its default PHP mail — either way, all other features still work. Works with any SMTP provider: Gmail, SendGrid, Amazon SES, Mailgun, and more Configurable host, port, encryption (SSL/TLS), username, password, from email, and from name Secure credential storage using WordPress’s built-in options API Fallback Sending Method If the primary sending method fails, Smooth SMTP can automatically retry using a fallback. This works regardless of whether you’re using SMTP or WordPress’s default PHP mail as your primary. Fallback to WordPress Default (PHP mail) or a second SMTP server Full credential configuration for the fallback SMTP Logged separately so you can see exactly which method delivered each email Failure Alert Channels Get notified the moment an email fails — through the channels your team already uses. Slack, Discord Telegram (via Bot API — requires bot token and chat ID) WhatsApp (via CallMeBot webhook) SMS or any custom webhook endpoint Add multiple channels, enable/disable each independently Send Test Alert button per channel Alerts are throttled to at most one per 60 seconds to avoid flooding Email Summary Reports Receive a periodic HTML email summarising your site’s email activity. Hourly, daily, weekly, or monthly schedule Total sent and failed counts, breakdown by sending method, and recent failures Configurable recipient address Send Summary Now button for an instant preview Email Logging Every email your site sends is logged with full detail. Status (success / failed), sender, recipients, subject, message body Sent Via column showing which method delivered the email (Primary SMTP, Fallback SMTP, Fallback WordPress Default, etc.) Search, filter, and paginate logs from the admin dashboard View full email detail in a modal Bulk delete, bulk resend, and delete-all options Admin dashboard notice when the most recent email failed Dashboard A at-a-glance overview of your site’s email activity. Total sent, failed, and success rate stat cards Breakdown by sending method with progress bars Recent failures table Filter by day, week, month, or all time Test Email Send a test email at any time to verify your configuration. Choose which sending method to test — primary or fallback — independently Send plain text or HTML test emails Specify any recipient address Always available regardless of whether SMTP is configured Other One-click import of email logs from Post SMTP Option to keep logs and settings when the plugin is deleted Compatible with Post SMTP and WP Mail SMTP (Smooth SMTP acts as a fallback when another SMTP plugin is detected) Privacy Policy This plugin logs email metadata including sender address, recipient addresses, subject line, message body, and sending status. SMTP credentials are stored in your WordPress database. No data is transmitted to external services except through the alert channels and SMTP servers you explicitly configure.