August 11, 2024 — The carbon footprint of the World Wide Web expands every passing year, and we need to figure out ways to diminish it in order to truly use digitalisation as the weapon that can help us battle the climate change, and to create more sustainable choices for a healthier planet and environment.
In this talk we shall explore the concept of Green Sustainable Web and how we as designers, developers and content creators can do our part to make WordPress websites more energy efficient, and thus more environment-friendly. We shall discuss the most common design and content pitfalls that can make your WordPress site “energy-hungry”, how we can design better solutions to avoid the said pitfalls, how to measure the impact, and most importantly – how to do this without compromising great UX and your SEO.
August 11, 2024 — There are many ways to create Gutenberg blocks. Advanced Custom Fields is widely used plugin to create custom blocks and it offers an easy learning curve for developers used to work with ACF. On the other hand WordPress offers a native approach for developing custom blocks without any plugins. There’s lot of benefits of native approach and learning how to write blocks with React and other native tools is a valuable skill in any developers toolbox. This talk will cover reasons why everyone should create native blocks instead of using third party plugins.
August 11, 2024 — …And nobody sees the same colour you see, anyway.
This talk opens up a liberating perspective on colour, debunking a few theory and psychology myths, and providing practical information on how to craft accessible, inclusive colour palettes. With the very welcome side effect of getting your clients the conversions they want – by expanding their audience thanks to accessibility and inclusion. Even if we don’t really care about their brand colour!
August 11, 2024 — Remember the famous “5 minutes installation” process for installing WordPress? Let’s see what WP-CLI can do in 5 minutes. And everything else that can happen in the terminal in 40 minutes. We might actually make WordPress instances more secure. Or just break it.
This is not your usual presentation talk. This is a live terminal commanding; SSHing your WordPress administration and development; and releasing the Kraken or two.
August 11, 2024 — I know, the heart start pumping hard, your mind starts running wild and the anxiety appears. This is normal once you face a successful hacking attempt. OK, now let’s act and correct, let’s apply what we call Incident Response.
First of all, let’s put the case in perspective, this will help to understand the dimension and will help to calm down ourselves with the tranquility that the taking actions towards the recovery gives.
August 11, 2024 — Tarkastelen, mitä kaikkea on tehtävissä WordPress-sivuston sisäisen haun kehittämiseksi. Erityisesti huomion kohteena on suomen kielen erityispiirteet ja sivuston rakenteen huomioiminen hakutuloksissa. Tapausesimerkkinä on Kirjavinkit.fi ja työkaluna Relevanssi Premium, mutta esiteltyjä ratkaisuja voi toteuttaa muillakin työkaluilla.
August 11, 2024 — Choosing the right hosting platform can be a challenging task, especially with so many options available in the market. In this talk, we’ll explore the factors to consider when evaluating different hosting platforms for your Managed WordPress site, using the story of WP.one (previously known as WP-Cloud) as an example of how hosting platforms can evolve over time.
WP.one is a Managed WordPress hosting product that was created by our speaker 7 years ago as a sole entrepreneur. Over time, the company behind WP.one was acquired by Zoner, and then by group.one. Today, our speaker is leading the technical hosting infrastructure for WP.one, which has grown significantly in scale and complexity.
Through the story of WP.one, we’ll discuss the different types of hosting platforms available, such as shared hosting, VPS and cloud hosting. We’ll also explore the key considerations for each platform, including performance metrics like speed and uptime, scalability features like resource allocation and load balancing, security features, and achieving performance at scale.
We’ll illustrate how these factors have impacted the evolution of WP.one over the years, and how our speaker and their team have adapted and optimized the hosting platform to meet the changing needs of their customers. Through real-world examples and case studies, we’ll show how the right hosting platform can make a significant difference in website performance and user experience, and how to balance these factors based on your specific needs and budget.
By the end of this talk, attendees will have a comprehensive understanding of how to evaluate and choose the right hosting platform for their Managed WordPress site, based on their unique goals and requirements, and how to adapt and optimize their hosting platform over time to meet changing needs.
August 11, 2024 — I would like to discuss the effect the invasion of Ukraine has had on WordPress websites. I have developed a platform (WP-Ensure/WP-Turva) that monitors and maintains WordPress and Multisite installations and since the invasion there has been a clear change in how bots are attacking WP sites. I would like to discuss the incentives behind why hackers usually use bots to attack WP sites including data stealing, bringing the sites down, simply for fun etc, also some real-life stories of what I have seen and how things have changed with attacks coming out of the Russian Federation. I will talk about ways to mitigate the risks already at DNS level through for example Cloudflare, as well as tools at server level and within WP itself that can help protect your site. I would like to talk about common attacks, why they happen and what you can do to prevent them as a web developer or end-user.
August 11, 2024 — ICT is quickly becoming a bigger source of greenhouse gas emissions than flying. A recent study by Lancaster University estimated our emissions to be between 2.1 and 3.9 per cent of global emissions. This means software spews out between 1,222,000,000 and 2,270,000,000 tons of carbon dioxide equivalent to atmosphere – every single year.
Even if WordPress usage might be just a drop in a bucket, we are still responsible for the planet, the future generations and need to do our part.
In this session, I’ll explain the importance of the matter, how one could approach it, and what each and everyone of us can do about the emissions. I will also show three ways of mitigating the issue with measuring the environmental impact, reducing waste, and minimising software. Further, there will be practical guidance that fits WordPress in specific and CMS/DXP platforms in general.
After the session, you most probably end up having “oh crap” and “yes, we can do it” thoughts. When returning from WordCamp, you feel compelled to make changes in the ways you think, code, design, and host sites – for the best of the planet.
August 11, 2024 — Oliver has worked with WordPress development across various projects, from small startups to city-wide websites. Around 1.5 years ago, he decided to transition from agency work to a product-oriented role while still working with WordPress. This shift has given him fresh insights, including tackling new and unexpected challenges. He’ll discuss these experiences in his WordCamp presentation, sharing both the anticipated and unexpected challenges encountered along the way.