Author Archive

  • Hiroki Saiki: 安心して WordPress を使おう!クイズでわかるセキュリティ

    WordCamp Niigata 2019Speaker: Hiroki Saiki

    October 29, 2019 — WordPress でホームページを作って運用するときに、避けて通れないのがセキュリティです。
    「うちは小さなホームページだから大丈夫」ということはありません。規模の大小に関わらずセキュリティが大事なのは変わりませんし、「攻撃者」も規模の大小だけで攻撃先を決めたりはしていません。
    では、どうやったら『安全に』WordPress のホームページを運用できるのでしょうか?
    このセッションでは、「セキュリティが大事なのはわかるけど、実際にどうやったらいいの?」という初心者にもわかりやすく、安心して WordPress のホームページを運用できるセキュリティのポイントをクイズ形式でお伝えします。

    Presentation Slides »

  • Steve Zehngut: Breaking Out of the WordCamp “Bubble”

    WordCamp Long Beach 2019Speaker: Steve Zehngut

    October 29, 2019 — Successful consultants will always recommend the right tool for the job. This is how you elevate yourself from a vendor to a trusted partner. If we stay huddled within our own community, without paying attention to what is going on outside the WordPress community, we’ll be out of touch with customers and prospects. Knowing your preference (WordPress) is different than understanding all your options. Understanding the difference is critical to staying competitive in today’s industry.

    Steve Zenghut discusses the current landscape and the process a prospect goes through when evaluating a WordPress proposal, including a brief look at some of the competitors for content management, eCommerce and SaaS platforms.

  • Natalie MacLees: The Tangled Web We’re Weaving

    WordCamp Long Beach 2019Speaker: Natalie MacLees

    October 29, 2019 — WordPress now powers over one third of all websites on the internet. The decisions that the WordPress community makes ripple out and make an impact on the ways people use the web, how web developers and designers do their work, and influence future technologies and development. That’s a lot of power in our hands – are we using it wisely? We have a responsibility to lead by example.

    Natalie MacLees explores the influence our community is having on accessibility and inclusive design, the things we’re neglecting, the impact that our decisions are having on people across the globe, and what we could be doing better.

  • Gabriel Mays: The Future of WordPress: Reducing Fragmentation & Complexity

    WordCamp Long Beach 2019Speaker: Gabriel Mays

    October 29, 2019 — Gabriel Mays explores the conditions of WordPress’ success (it’s not what most people think) and why that won’t work for us going forward to reach 50% and beyond. He will also explore the core elements he feels is holding WordPress back–complexity and fragmentation–and ways we could possibly resolve it.

  • Drew Jaynes: WordPress Development in a Modern PHP World

    WordCamp Birmingham 2019Speaker: Drew Jaynes

    October 29, 2019 — It’s never been a more exciting time to be writing PHP in the WordPress ecosystem! WordPress core recently bumped the minimum-supported PHP version from 5.2 to 5.6 and plans to bump it again later this year all the way to 7.2!

    Whether that least sentence incites feelings of jubilation or anxiety in you, this talk has your back. We’ll take a deep dive into ways devs of all levels can breathe new life into their plugins and themes with modern PHP features and principles.

    We’ll cover back-compat gotchas, including how to deal with version-specific features and code partial plugin activation so you don’t break users’ sites with your upgrades. We’ll also go over modern principles such as using autoloaders and namespaces, setting up group aliasing, using return type declarations, leveraging traits, and more.

    Finally, we’ll talk about how to create a development plan for the short- and long-term so that continual and improvement and iteration can keep you up to date with modern PHP development.

    Presentation Slides »

  • Sylvie Stacy: 10 Ways to Get Your Readers to Generate Content For You

    WordCamp Birmingham 2019Speaker: Sylvie Stacy

    October 29, 2019 — Regardless of how passionate we are about our niches, blog posts don’t always flow effortlessly out of our brains. Luckily, there are some great ways to get your readers to generate high-quality content for you. And WordPress has excellent tools to help you accomplish this. We’ll discuss different options for user-generated content, how to select an option that aligns with your goals for your website, and how to engage and encourage reader participation and contributions. We’ll look at examples of WordPress plugins for a few types of content.

  • Joseph LoPreste: Web Accessibility made easy for WordPress

    WordCamp Birmingham 2019Speaker: Joseph LoPreste

    October 29, 2019 — We explain what the WCAG 2.1 guidelines are and why they are so important to us as WordPress developers and agencies.

    Then we offer our easy and actionable steps that you can do to your website as soon as you get home to help you become compliant.

    We of course go through and explain each step we offer so you will understand clearly.

    Finally, we offer some resources and links to completely free plugins that you can use to test your websites Section 508 compliance and help your compliance instantly.

    Presentation Slides »

  • Alain Schlesser: Building a Realtime Status Page using the Combined Power of Gutenberg and Firebase

    WordCamp Brighton 2019Speaker: Alain Schlesser

    October 29, 2019 — Modern infrastructure technologies like serverless computing and real-time databases offer a huge potential for new and improved online user experiences.

    In this session, we’ll go through a practical use case to find out how we can harness their power in the context of WordPress.

    We’ll build a Gutenberg block that shows status updates, to be incorporated into a status page. We’ll use serverless computing to allow adding status updates via a Slack command, and we’ll use a real-time database so that all visitors receive these updates in real-time without any impact on our WordPress server.

  • Craig West: Decoupled/Headless WP and WP Components for non-WP sites

    WordCamp Brighton 2019Speaker: Craig West

    October 29, 2019 — Decoupled/Headless WordPress sites allow WordPress to be at the hub of internet technology.

    Rather than a ‘them and us’, WordPress can be the bridge for the non-technical client, allowing the decoupled site (which can be just HTML/CSS/JS) to integrate all the non-WordPress technologies.

    The client can have the comfort and reassurance of WordPress CMS, the viewer can benefit from all the other non-WordPress technologies.

  • Stacy M. Clements: WordPress Security: Beyond The Plugin

    WordCamp Birmingham 2019Speaker: Stacy M. Clements

    October 29, 2019 — You installed a security plugin, and you don’t get much traffic anyway since your business is small…so you don’t need to worry about getting hacked, right?

    While there are several good security plugins that are a useful part of a security plan, securing a WordPress site requires more than a plugin. Plugins are handy tools but can give a false sense of security if the entire security landscape is not considered.

    You may not have a lot of money to invest, but you can learn a framework and some basic actions to help you get a better grasp on security for your website – and your business.