Language: English

  • Dave Navarro Jr.: Advanced Plugins for the Mobile Web

    WordCamp Kansas City 2015Speaker: Dave Navarro Jr

    January 9, 2016 — Take charge of your mobile web experience. Dave will demonstrate several plugins to help webmasters create better mobile sites. Including mobile menus and custom content for mobile users.

  • Chris Koerner: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Update Button

    WordCamp Kansas City 2015Speaker: Chris Koerner

    January 8, 2016 — The best WordPress site is an updated WordPress site. Learn about why you should update your site and how to do it without the headache. I’ll talk about ways to prevent problems when updating and share some best practices on site updates.

    Presentation Slides »

  • Josepha Haden: WordPress.com vs. WordPress.org

    WordCamp Kansas City 2015Speaker: Josepha Haden Chomphosy

    January 8, 2016 — Choosing between WordPress.com and WordPress.org is a pivotal decision point and it can be confusing to figure out which one is right for you. Join Josepha for a quick look at the differences between WordPress.org and WordPress.com, as well as suggestions for how to choose between them.

  • Mark Wilkinson: Beyond FTP: My WordPress Development Workflow

    WordCamp Edinburgh 2015Speaker: Mark Wilkinson

    January 8, 2016 — We have all used FTP as developers to move files from editing them locally to our production server. Developers know the problems this can cause and why alternatives are needed. In this talk I will introduce my WordPress development process and how you can move on from FTP to a more robust development and deployment system. The talk is suitable for developers and designers who build complete sites, or work in teams in which they are responsible for delivering part of a project, collaborating with others.

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  • Valerie Adler: Your Website? It’s Not For You!

    WordCamp Edinburgh 2015Speaker: Valerie Adler

    January 8, 2016 — The hardest thing for many clients to understand is the PURPOSE of their website… who it’s for (their customers) and what it’s supposed to do (attract new or more business). In SEO terms, the most important thing is the matter of relevance. Valerie asks: relevant to what, relevant to whom?

    Understanding one’s client is the key to knowing how to present the content of the site. In this session, Valerie will discuss the importance of defining business objectives and identifying one’s target audience in creating content that both engages that audience AND satisfies Google’s directives on creating an SEO-friendly website.

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  • Alex Christensen: Plugins Part 2 – Ecommerce

    WordCamp Sacramento 2015Speaker: Alex Christensen

    January 8, 2016 — How to effectively start an ecommerce website with WordPress by selecting the correct shopping cart solution to keep your business focused on the foundations before expanding.

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  • Linus Wallen, Per Gardehall and Carl Klingberg: Case study – sweden.se

    WordCamp Krakow 2015Speakers: Linus Wallen, Per Gardehall, Carl Klingberg

    January 7, 2016 — Sweden.se – this website is an official source for facts about Sweden. It is publicly funded, with four organisations behind it: the Swedish Institute (SI), Business Sweden, VisitSweden and the Swedish Government Offices, including the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Enterprise, Energy and Communications.

    Case Studies o stronie opartej na WordPressie, która jest oficjalnym źródłem faktów o Szwecji. Witryna sweden.se jest finansowana ze środków publicznych za pośrednictwem czterech organizacji: The Swedish Institute (SI), Business Sweden, VisitSweden oraz jednostek rządowych, m.in. Ministerstwa Spraw Zagranicznych, Ministerstwa Kultury oraz Ministerstwa Przedsiębiorczości, Energii i Komunikacji. Strona jest dowodem na to, że WordPress może udźwignąć naprawdę duże inwestycje.

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  • Joe Chellman: Let’s Debug for Real!

    WordCamp Orange County 2015Speaker: Joe Chellman

    January 7, 2016 — If you’ve written a line of code in any language, you’ve gotten into a state where you don’t necessarily know what the frig is going on. That thing – it’s right there in the template! Or right in that functions.php file, but nothing happens! Or the wrong thing happens! AAAAAAAARGH!

    Sure, you can try adding “echo”, “print_r”, “var_dumps” and the like all over the place, but it’s messy, and there is a better way. With a little bit of set up (but not much – seriously), you too can debug like a champ. If you’ve never seen a real debugger before, or if you’ve just dabbled with one, this talk could change your life substantially for the better.

  • Mike Hansen: Google Analytics for Website Owners

    WordCamp Orange County 2015Speaker: Mike Hansen

    January 7, 2016 — Having a website is a great but if you do not know what is working and what is not, are you getting the most out of your site? This presentation we will go over the analytics dashboard and describe some of the uses for specific areas. We will also go over a list of things to do right now to improve your data. This involves things like setting up site search, custom filters to remove common spam referrers, setup goals and automating your reports.

  • Jason Agnew: Open Source – The Story of Herbert

    WordCamp Edinburgh 2015Speaker: Jason Agnew

    January 7, 2016 — The story begins with a simple, but valuable, warning from experience: that even the best developers can fall victim to the pressures of routine. This talk discusses how results can quickly be replaced by burnout and imposter syndrome.

    The cure for Jason was a WordPress plugin framework, purpose-built to rediscover his confidence and fall in love with coding all over again. We follow his journey back to development bliss through the challenges of creating space for experimentation without the usual client pressures, transitioning from pet project to collaborative product, and learning to accept that it’s okay not to know everything.

    The success (and failures) of the experiment soon fed into the philosophy of Big Bite and began to influence everything from how they worked to the environment they created for their staff, as well as how they communicated with clients and gave back to the digital community.

    Learn the ways in which open source can be embraced, from the smallest acts of personal knowledge sharing to the broadest business practices.

    Presentation Slides »