Today I’m going to be taking a look at a plugin I came across called WordPress Download Manger. Based on it’s description in the WordPress.org Plugin Directory, this plugin’s purpose is to help you manage, track, and control file downloads from your WordPress
site. Since I’ve been looking for an easy way to do just that, I
thought I’d give this plugin a test drive and let you all know what I
found out.
WordPress Download Manager Installation
As with any WordPress Plugin,
I first went to the Plugin Directory and downloaded the WordPress
Download Manager’s zipped file. I then got into my WordPress admin went
to Plugins > Add New > Upload and Installed the plugin.

WordPress Download Manager Configuration
Upon activation, a new File Manager Menu appeared in my side bar.

The
first thing I did was poke around and see what was what. I noticed they
have a screen for managing your downloads, creating download
categories, adjusting settings, and of course adding new files/packages.
The settings I left as there were.

I then moved on to Categories and added a few that seemed to make sense.

After
that I went to the Add New File section, because I figured I won’t have
anything to manage unless I add some content. Unfortunately this is
where things started going downhill for me. As you can see, I created a
new package and attempted to upload a zipped file of a single album of
music. The file size was approximately 50mb – so nothing excessive. I
tried multiple times to upload different file types and sizes to no
avail. This was particularly frustrating as each upload attempt took
more than 10 minutes – which I thought was way too long. I’m not on
dial-up or anything here.

As you can see, my manager remained empty.

Here’s what it’s supposed to look like after you have some content in it.

WordPress Download Manager Implementation
If
this plugin would have worked for me, this is supposed to be what the
download would look like from my site reader/user’s perspective.

In Conclusion
It’s
really hard for me to recommend this plugin right now. I was pretty
disappointed in its performance given it’s high rating in the directory
(4 out of 5 stars) and the fact that it claims to be compatible with the
latest version of WordPress 3.4.1. When I clicked on the Support tab
after having a lot of trouble myself, I saw that there was a support
ticket saying that the plugin is broken in WordPress 3.4 and up. Since
I’m running WordPress 3.4.1 I’m pretty much out of luck. Hopefully I can
revisit this when they update their plugin. For now, if you don’t have
the latest version of WordPress and this functionality is something you
want, install it and don’t upgrade your WordPress software until this
plugin works on the latest version. Otherwise, avoid it.
Download Link: WordPress Download Manager
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