We have services for Brownsville based website owners offering WordPress Maintenance to individuals, small businesses, medium size businesses, and large corporations. Our team of experienced WordPress developers can keep your WordPress installation, plugins and themes all up to date on a monthly basis. We believe that the most important part of creating a secure online presence in Brownsville Pennsylvania is making sure your website has the highest levels of security, with maintaining security updates.
We provide comprehensive WordPress maintenance solutions, to help ensure your WordPress website always up to date. Our Brownsville team members have expertise in web hosting, malware protection, vulnerability scanning and malware removal.
Industry standard WordPress hardening and our special security features as a bonus.
Setup an automated backup system for a fail safe version of your WordPress installation.
Monthly WordPress core and Plugin updates, with human inspection afterwards.
Up time monitoring that notifies our team to detect any server issues.
WordPress Maintenance Services in Brownsville Pennsylvania
Our maintenance and support services include:
The term "Managed WordPress" is misleading, they do not actually manage your WordPress. They do not update WordPress core, WordPress plugins or WordPress themes. They only thing that is managed is the server operating system. It's not really any different than a standard hosting plan. Only you are paying a premium for a fancy term, "Managed WordPress". Our services is the real managed WordPress, as we keep everything up to date on a continuous basis, ensuring all security patches are installed. We also use real humans for updating and inspecting your website to make sure nothing breaks. There are some automated update services but they use robots and could care less if your website breaks after an update.
With our Brownsville, PA team the initial setup takes 24 hours, which includes creating a back up system on your server (where applicable), updating WordPress Core, WordPress Plugins and WordPress Themes. Afterwards we look over the website manually to ensure nothing has broken. Moving forward updates and inspection is done routinely on a monthly basis.
The internet is a vulnerable and insecure place, there is never a guarantee that your website won't be compromised at some point in time. Even big companies that have very intelligent cyber security professionals get compromised from time to time. Our service is for mitigating risk by keeping your site up to date with “known” patches. As well as implementing best security practices to minimize your risk. With our monthly maintenance plan if in the rare case your site does get infected with malware we will remove it for free! (with the stipulation that you are following our recommended strong password policy)
Brownsville is a borough in Fayette County, Pennsylvania, United States, first settled in 1785 as the site of a trading post a few years after the defeat of the Iroquois enabled a resumption of westward migration after the Revolutionary War. The trading post soon became a tavern and inn and was receiving emigrants heading west, as it was located above the cut bank overlooking the first ford that could be reached to those descending from the Allegheny Mountains. Brownsville is located 40 miles (64 km) south of Pittsburgh along the east bank of the Monongahela River. According to the United States Census Bureau, the borough of Brownsville has a total area of 1.1 square miles (2.8 km2), of which 0.97 square miles (2.5 km2) is land and 0.1 square miles (0.3 km2), or 10.47%, is water—most of which is the Fayette County half of the Monongahela River between the community and the flatter lands of West Brownsville on the opposite shore in Washington County. As a community, the town is the central population center for a number of outlying hamlets geographically tied to the town for the same reasons they were founded nearby: western Pennsylvania has far more hills and steep slopes than flats or gentle sloping terrains suitable for settlement. This keeps Brownsville at the nexus of the transportation infrastructure which grew up during its history. While no longer a passenger depot, Brownsville and West Brownsville share an important railway bridge, creating a balloon loop that allows the turning of complete coal trains. The limited-access toll road PA Route 43 connects the town to strategic points and southern Pittsburgh at Clairton. PA Route 88, hugging the river, connects to towns up and down the Monongahela Valley. The historic National Road (now US Route 40) reached East Saint Louis, Illinois, and connected the town to the immigrants arriving in the port of Baltimore traveling west on the Cumberland Turnpike and the National Road. From its founding, well into the 19th century, as the first reachable population center west of the Alleghenies barrier range on the Mississippi watershed, the borough quickly grew into an industrial center, market town, transportation hub, outfitting center, and riverboat-building powerhouse. As a trading post, it was a gateway destination for emigrants heading west to the Ohio Country and the new United States' Northwest Territory, and later for travelers heading westwards on the various Emigrant Trails both to the Near West and later the Far West. As an outfitting center, the borough provided the markets for the small-scale industries in the surrounding counties, as well as for Maryland shipping goods over the pass by mule train via the Cumberland Narrows toll route. Brownsville became a major center for building steamboats through the 19th century, producing 3,000 boats by 1888. The borough developed in the late 19th century as a railroad yard and coking center, with other industries related to the rise of steel in the Pittsburgh area. It reached a peak of population of more than 8,000 in 1940. Postwar development took place in suburbs, as was typical of the time. The restructuring of the railroad and steel industries caused a severe loss of jobs and population in Brownsville, beginning in the 1970s. The borough had a population of 2,331 as of the 2010 census.