Author Archive

  • Jenny Wong: We Didn’t Care About Diversity… What Happened Next Is Insane!

    WordCamp Europe 2017Speaker: Jenny Wong

    June 21, 2017 — As a conference speaker, community conference organiser and Open Source evangelist, Jenny loudly cheers people on to share knowledge and contribute back to Open Source projects. Her love for development goes beyond the screen and she is an advocate of both the PHP and WordPress communities.

    She said during her talk “What happens when you create an event and don’t care about diversity? What happens when you don’t listen to what everyone tells you but think in entirely different terms? This lightning talk will tell you what happened when I stopped caring about diversity and started thinking about event organisation in a different way. What we learned will blow your mind.”

    Presentation Slides »

  • Yoav Farhi: Right To Left Languages Support – The Right Way

    WordCamp Europe 2017Speaker: Yoav Farhi

    June 21, 2017 — Yoav Farhi is an Iñtërnâtiônàlizætiønër at Automattic, who works on everything related i18n (that’s internationalization) and l10n (localization) and of course, translation. A core contributor to WordPress for 8 years now, he works hard to make the web a better place.

    Adding Right to left (RTL) languages support to your themes and plugins doesn’t have to be a chore. This short talk will introduce the basics of RTL support and demonstrate how to use automated tools to simplify the process.

  • Andrea Middleton: How WordPress Communities Are Built

    WordCamp Europe 2017Speaker: Andrea Middleton

    June 21, 2017 — Andrea Middleton has worked with WordCamp organizers since 2011, helping people plan events that inspire people to do more with WordPress, connect the WordPress community, and contribute to the WordPress project.

    She said in his talk “The WordPress community is built and maintained by volunteers, using the same methods — and many of the same tools — that are used to make WordPress itself. In this session, you’ll get a look at the WordPress community’s “source code” and learn how to contribute to the growth of your local community — or create a community if you don’t already have one.”

  • Sarah Semark: Night Of The Living Style Guides

    WordCamp Europe 2017Speaker: Sarah Semark

    June 21, 2017 — Sarah Semark is a designer, developer, and world-traveller. After running a business for eight years, she now works for Automattic designing and building WordPress themes.

    The line between design and development is getting blurrier, and our approach to web design is becoming more modular. How do we keep track of it all?

    Style guides to the rescue!

    Using style guides that update as our projects progress, we can visually document our work and ensure that everything stays consistent. They may seem daunting and time-consuming at first, but they don’t have to be.

    How do I get started with living style guides? What’s a living style guide anyway, and how do I know if mine is dead? Isn’t that going to slow me down? Why should I bother?

  • Andrew Nacin: People Over Code

    WordCamp Europe 2017Speaker: Andrew Nacin

    June 21, 2017 — Andrew Nacin is a Lead Developer of WordPress. He’s led major releases, mentored contributors, and spearheaded new development.

    He said in his talk ‘You can make a bigger impact with people skills and thoughtful human-centered design than simply with code. After running WordPress releases and then spending two years working in government, WordPress lead developer Andrew Nacin wants to talk about how your interactions with others matter and how it’s important to think with people, not for them.’

  • David Lockie: How To Grow From Freelancer To Agency Owner

    WordCamp Europe 2017Speaker: David Lockie

    June 21, 2017 — Taking that first step from working as a freelancer to making your first hire and becoming an agency is an exciting but daunting step. In this talk I will explain how I accidentally started an agency and strategically grew my WordPress specialist agency from myself to over 40 people over the course of 5 years with minimum staff turnover.

    I will cover:

    – How and when to make hires
    – Where to find new employees (from developers to operations)
    – How to create a company culture
    – How you can ensure your employees are on board for the long run

  • Rahul Bansal: How Translation Sprints Helps Bring In New Contributors!

    WordCamp Europe 2017Speaker: Rahul Bansal

    June 21, 2017 — Rahul is the founder and CEO of rtCamp – the only WordPress.com VIP Partner from Asia.

    He said in his talk Whether you’re a budding developer, a pixel-perfect designer, or just like helping out, we’re always looking for people to help make WordPress even better.

    Presentation Slides »

  • Pascal Birchler: Translating WordPress Into a Language Nobody Speaks

    WordCamp Europe 2017Speaker: Pascal Birchler

    June 21, 2017 — Switzerland has four official languages: German, Italian, French, and Romansh. Growing up in the canton of Grisons, I got in touch with the latter early on. Unfortunately, it is a dying language. To do something against this, I decided to translate WordPress into Romansh. And I didn’t even speak the language!

    What began with one person, one idea, one passion, got attention from more people outside of the WordPress community and encouraged them to help to translate WordPress. In this process, I not only began to learn the language and appreciate its beauty, I also learned some interesting things by introducing people to WordPress, the polyglots team, and the translation management tool.

  • Lauren Jeffcoat: Destination Anywhere – Creating The Ultimate DMO or Directory Website

    WordCamp Raleigh 2017Speaker: Lauren Jeffcoat

    June 20, 2017 — Lauren has been building WordPress websites for almost a decade and is currently part of the OnTheGoSystems WPML Customer Support team.

    She discussed how to create the perfect directory or Destination Marketing Organization site from the ground up. A directory site or DMO site is regionally focused and typically has many different components that overlap and connect. I’ll discuss the best tools and practices for building these components and also how to organize and tie the content together.

  • Hari Shanker: WordPress For Startups

    WordCamp Nashik 2016Speaker: Hari Shanker

    June 20, 2017 — Hari Shanker is a passionate WordPress enthusiast, Hari is currently employed as a Happiness Engineer at Automattic.

    WordPress is the perfect tool for startups! Free, open source, has several customization options and is backed by an active community – the perfect tool any startup needs!

    Today’s startups face a mélange of issues – one of them is the need for a potent tool to support them. This is where WordPress comes into the picture: From creating enterprise grade websites for their corporate website, to riding the eCommerce wave by setting up a WooCommerce-powered online store, to even providing Web development services through WordPress, the possibilities are limitless!

    Presentation Slides »