Podcasts about openverse

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Best podcasts about openverse

Latest podcast episodes about openverse

OEG Voices
OEG Voices 075: Madison Swain-Bowden and Zack Krida on Openverse

OEG Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 39:06 Transcription Available


In this episode we hear from two key members of the project team behind the open media search tool Openverse,...

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket
WP A DAY #19: Resumen State Of The Word; Una web más interconectada; Experiencias en IA

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2023 2:46


Bienvenido a una nueva edición de WP A DAY, tu fuente de Inteligencia Artificial para conocer las últimas noticias y actualizaciones en el mundo de WordPress. Hoy es 16 de diciembre de 2023. En el resumen de hoy, tenemos varias historias que atraerán tu atención. En primer lugar, el co-fundador de WordPress, Matt Mullenweg, y el arquitecto principal de Gutenberg, Matías Ventura, ofrecieron a la comunidad de WordPress un resumen del progreso de 2023 y un vistazo a lo que está por venir en 2024. Destacaron el aniversario número 20 de WordPress, los 70 WordCamps en 33 países, el premio de Openverse por su biblioteca de medios de código abierto, el lanzamiento de la herramienta Playground de WordPress y las mejoras en el editor de sitio. También anunciaron planes para una migración sin problemas, colaboración en tiempo real, mejoras en los patrones y rendimiento más rápido en futuras versiones. Para conocer más sobre esto, visita: wordpress.com. En un contexto distinto, en este episodio, Josepha Haden Chomphosy, Directora Ejecutiva de WordPress, expresa la visión de un ecosistema colaborativo donde el intercambio de conocimientos y las contribuciones a herramientas de código abierto conduzcan a una web más interconectada y empoderada. También se anuncia el lanzamiento de Gutenberg 17.1, se propone una encuesta anual de encuentros y se solicita retroalimentación sobre las páginas del Manual de Lecciones. Además, se destaca la accesibilidad de WordPress Playground y la implementación de Matrix para una comunicación mejorada. Más detalles sobre este asunto en wordpress.org. Y por último, el autor comenta su experiencia explorando herramientas de IA generativa. Comenzó con un blog en el que imágenes e historias eran generadas por IA. Luego, creó un podcast utilizando WPBriefs, una herramienta de IA, para generar guiones automatizados basados en feeds de noticias de WordPress. Utilizó ChatGPT para obtener resúmenes en español y luego tradujo los guiones a otros idiomas con Google Translate. Utilizó Amazon Polly para generar voces humanas en diferentes idiomas. El autor aún está perfeccionando los detalles del proceso y los episodios de su podcast "WP A DAY" están disponibles en español en la página de Blogpocket. Amplía tus conocimientos en www.blogpocket.com. Con esto concluye nuestro resumen de noticias de hoy. ¡Permanece atento a más actualizaciones interesantes del mundo de WordPress! Y consulta la sección de enlaces citados para obtener más información. Si te gustó este episodio, suscríbete al podcast y deje una reseña. Para obtener la transcripción y los enlaces a los artículos mencionados en este programa, visita Blogpocket.com. Gracias por escucharnos y nos vemos en el próximo programa.

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket
WP A DAY #17: Website Carbon, nuevo sistema de calificación; WordPress Stories; Openverse y Photo Directory

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2023 2:36


Bienvenido a una nueva edición de WP A DAY, tu fuente generada algorítmicamente para conocer las últimas noticias y actualizaciones en el ámbito de WordPress. Hoy es sábado, 2 de diciembre de 2023. En las noticias que te traemos en esta ocasión, tenemos unas cuantas historias interesantes. En primer lugar, Website Carbon ha introducido un nuevo sistema de calificación para ayudar a comprender y reducir las emisiones de carbono de los sitios web. El sistema utiliza una escala de calificación basada en las emisiones de CO2 por vista de página, similar a las clasificaciones de eficiencia energética de los electrodomésticos. El objetivo es hacer que la información sea accesible y comprensible para todos, y fomentar prácticas más sostenibles en el diseño y desarrollo web. El sistema busca desafiar a la industria y fomentar el progreso hacia un internet más sostenible. Encuentra la noticia completa en wholegraindigital.com. Por otra parte, el autor del artículo menciona que no le gusta el formato de WordPress Stories y explica las razones. Primero, dice que nunca ha utilizado este tipo de publicaciones y no le gustan. Prefiere leer texto y desplazarse de izquierda a derecha y de arriba hacia abajo. Segundo, señala que las Stories requieren el editor de bloques o la aplicación de WordPress, pero él prefiere usar el editor clásico en modo de texto en el navegador. Tercero, opina que las Stories son un formato extraño y añaden complejidad a WordPress. Además, no se pueden crear localmente y no se puede utilizar en su sitio web. Por último, destaca que aunque las Stories tienen un enlace permanente en línea, son un formato propietario y no se pueden copiar ni respaldar localmente. En resumen, el autor prefiere formatos simples de texto y no tiene interés en utilizar ni crear Stories. Tienes toda la información en jasonjournals.com. Y para finalizar, en este artículo se menciona el episodio de WordPress Briefing en el que se habló sobre dos recursos de medios con licencia abierta en el proyecto WordPress: Openverse y Photo Directory. Se explica que ambos proyectos han experimentado cambios y mejoras desde entonces, como que Photo Directory ha superado el hito de las 10.000 fotos y que Openverse ha fortalecido la confiabilidad de sus APIs. Se destaca que puede haber confusión sobre la diferencia entre ambos proyectos y se invita a escuchar el episodio para obtener más información. También se mencionan algunos eventos próximos, como el State of the Word y la convocatoria de patrocinadores para WordCamp Asia. Más detalles sobre este asunto en wordpress.org. Esto concluye nuestras noticias de hoy. No olvides revisar el apartado de enlaces citados para obtener más información. Si te gustó este episodio, suscríbete al podcast y deja una reseña. Para obtener la transcripción y los enlaces a los artículos mencionados en este programa, visita Blogpocket.com. Gracias por escucharnos y nos vemos en el próximo programa.

WP Briefing
Episode 67: Openverse & Photo Directory Rewind

WP Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 8:19


WordPress Executive Director, Josepha Haden Chomphosy, returns to a recent episode of the WordPress Briefing, which discussed two resources for openly licensed media in the WordPress project– Openverse and Photo Directory– and how they differ from one another!

wordpress directories openverse josepha haden chomphosy
Hacker Public Radio
HPR3977: Creative Commons Search Engine

Hacker Public Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023


Creative Commons has a new search engine available called Openverse. This is the evolution of the old CC Search developed by Creative Commons, which was taken over by WordPress, and now has further evolved. Links https://openverse.org/ https://openverse.org/sources https://make.wordpress.org/openverse/handbook/new-contributor-guide/ https://www.ahuka.com/a-search-engine-for-creative-commons-content/

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket
WP A DAY #10 - WordPress 6.4 Beta 4, The WordPress Photo Directory, WordPress.com se conecta al fediverso

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2023 2:54


Hola y bienvenido a WP A DAY, tu fuente para obtener las últimas noticias y actualizaciones en el mundo de WordPress. Hoy es domingo 15 de octubre de 2023. En un reciente artículo leído en WordPress, se anuncia la disponibilidad de la versión 6.4 Beta 4 para su descarga y pruebas. Se advierte que esta versión está en desarrollo, por lo que no se recomienda instalarla en sitios web productivos. Se sugiere probarla en un servidor y sitio de pruebas. Se ofrecen tres formas de probarla: instalar el plugin WordPress Beta Tester, descargar la versión Beta 4 directamente o utilizar el comando WP-CLI. La fecha estimada para el lanzamiento final es el 7 de noviembre de 2023. Se insta a la comunidad a continuar probando para garantizar la calidad del lanzamiento. Se proporciona una guía detallada para quienes deseen contribuir como probadores. Esta versión Beta se lanzó en respuesta a la actualización de mantenimiento y seguridad de WordPress 6.3.2. El lanzamiento de la versión Release Candidate 6.4 está programado para el 17 de octubre y dependerá de la retroalimentación de los probadores. Agradecimientos a los contribuyentes en este lanzamiento. Sumérgete en la información completa en Make WordPress Core. En otro orden de cosas, en un informe exclusivo de The WordPress Photo Directory, se anunció que se ha superado oficialmente la marca de las 10.000 fotos. El propósito de este directorio es proporcionar fotografías gratuitas y de alta calidad, con licencia Creative Commons, enviadas por la comunidad y adecuadas para su uso en sitios de WordPress y otros lugares. El directorio fue propuesto por Matt Mullenweg en el State of the Word 2021 y ahora todas las imágenes se pueden ver en Openverse, un buscador de medios de código abierto. Las principales categorías de fotos en el directorio son naturaleza, arquitectura, objetos y animales. Por fin, el directorio de fotos se ha convertido en lo que Justin Tadlock imaginó en 2021: "un proyecto donde cualquier persona pueda subir una bonita foto de la naturaleza que haya tomado durante el fin de semana". Sumérgete en la información completa en wp-content.co. Y no puedes irte sin escuchar la noticia más sorprendente de hoy. ¡WordPress.com se conecta al fediverso! ActivityPub es la tecnología que permite a los usuarios de WordPress.com interactuar con una audiencia más amplia a través del fediverso. Con esta integración, los usuarios ahora pueden seguir blogs de varias plataformas directamente desde su cuenta de WordPress.com.  Lee esta gran noticia en el blog de WordPress.com. Gracias por acompañarnos en este episodio del podcast WP A DAY. Si quieres seguir aprendiendo sobre WordPress y estar al tanto de todas nuestras novedades, no olvides suscribirte a nuestro podcast. Además, recuerda que las transcripciones y los enlaces citados los puedes encontrar en Blogpocket.com. ¡Hasta la próxima!

WP Tavern
#93 – Piermario Orecchioni on How and Why WordPress Gets Translated

WP Tavern

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2023 46:52


On the podcast today we have Piermario Orecchioni, and he's here to explore the world of website translations. He questions whether it is morally or legally necessary to provide translations on websites. Piermario discusses the challenges of translating and reviewing strings in WordPress, stressing the importance of maintaining consistency with a glossary in each language. He shares his journey as a contributor to the Polyglots team and highlights improvements in the translation process, thanks to the GlotPress platform. Piermario encourages listeners to join the Polyglots team, emphasising that coding expertise is not necessary. He also talks about the ongoing translation efforts for projects like Openverse and Learn WordPress, making WordPress education accessible in different languages. Listen in for a fascinating discussion on the importance and complexity of translations in the WordPress community.

Jukebox
#93 – Piermario Orecchioni on How and Why WordPress Gets Translated

Jukebox

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2023 46:52


On the podcast today we have Piermario Orecchioni, and he's here to explore the world of website translations. He questions whether it is morally or legally necessary to provide translations on websites. Piermario discusses the challenges of translating and reviewing strings in WordPress, stressing the importance of maintaining consistency with a glossary in each language. He shares his journey as a contributor to the Polyglots team and highlights improvements in the translation process, thanks to the GlotPress platform. Piermario encourages listeners to join the Polyglots team, emphasising that coding expertise is not necessary. He also talks about the ongoing translation efforts for projects like Openverse and Learn WordPress, making WordPress education accessible in different languages. Listen in for a fascinating discussion on the importance and complexity of translations in the WordPress community.

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)
Openverse: mejor infraestructura abierta

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 5:11


El proyecto Openverse ha ganado el premio Open Education Award 2023 en la categoría de Open Infraestructure.

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket
WP A DAY #6 - La discusión por las listas de plugins en WordPress.com y WordPress.org; y más noticias

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2023 2:31


¡Hola y bienvenido a WP A DAY! Tu fuente de inteligencia artificial para conocer las últimas noticias y actualizaciones en el mundo de WordPress. Hoy es 17 de septiembre de 2023. En este episodio semanal, te traemos todas las novedades del mundo de WordPress. Sintoniza para descubrir las últimas actualizaciones y desarrollos emocionantes en la comunidad de WordPress. ¡No te lo puedes perder! Acabamos de leerlo: La comunidad de WordPress está terminando dos días de acaloradas discusiones que rápidamente descendieron a confrontaciones emocionales en diversos canales sociales, posterior a un tuit de John Blackbourn que planteaba preocupaciones sobre los listados de plugins de WordPress.com superando a los de WordPress.org en las búsquedas de Google. Desarrolladores expresaron inquietudes sobre el impacto SEO de clonar el directorio de plugins de WordPress.org para usarlo en WordPress.com, sin enlaces de regreso al plugin original. También se menciona la confusión entre WordPress.org y WordPress.com. Lee más sobre este asunto en WP Tavern Por otra parte, Openverse ha sido galardonado con el Premio a la Excelencia en Infraestructura Abierta en los Premios a la Educación Abierta por Excelencia 2023. Este premio reconoce el esfuerzo de Openverse por facilitar a todos el descubrimiento y uso de recursos educativos abiertos. Los revisores del premio destacaron la función de atribución con un solo clic y la capacidad de filtrar búsquedas por colecciones de origen y licencias específicas. Esta distinción refuerza el compromiso de Openverse y WordPress con el contenido abierto y celebra el trabajo de sus colaboradores, comunidad y socios en el avance de la educación abierta y obras creativas. Amplía tu conocimiento relacionado con esta noticia en WordPress News Y para finalizar, te traemos la última actualización que debes conocer. Desde el blog de Richard Tabor: El próximo avance de la paleta de comandos de WordPress se ve muy prometedor. Con nuevas funciones, una interfaz más pulida y mayor accesibilidad, ¿qué más se puede pedir? Además, los desarrolladores de plugins pueden agregar sus propios comandos utilizando el API de la paleta de comandos de WordPress de Riad Benguella. ¡El avance de WordPress 6.4 promete mucho! Accede a este post en Rich Tabor ¡Gracias por escuchar este episodio de WP A DAY! Esperamos que hayas disfrutado tanto como nosotros. No olvides suscribirte al podcast para no perderte ninguno de nuestros nuevos episodios. Recuerda que puedes encontrar las transcripciones y los enlaces mencionados en Blogpocket.com. ¡Hasta la próxima!

Linux Express, de Podcast Linux.
#171 Linux Express

Linux Express, de Podcast Linux.

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2023 9:43


Temas tratados en este episodio: Episodio #181 Linux Connexion con Roberto Ruisánchez Siguiente episodio: 6 meses con Arch Linux Probando Vorta para realizar copias de seguridad Bajar la resolución de unas fotos desde la terminal cal -y para echar un vistazo al calendario desde la terminal Tarjeta wifi + bluetooth para mi Xeon chino Probando Synthing para sincronizar carpetas Openverse, un directorio de obras Creative Commons Guía Arch Linux con consejos y trucos Evento EsLibre en Zaragoza el 12 y 13 de mayo Evento Akademy-es: Málaga el 9 y 10 de junio Recuerda que puedes contactar conmigo de las siguientes formas:

Sospechosos Habituales
T50.- Episodio 227. Openverse: audios y gráficos libres de derechos

Sospechosos Habituales

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2023 9:27


https://openverse.org/es le permite explorar mas de 700 millones de obras creativas, sin Copy Rignt, todas son Creative Commons, con cada una de las 8 opciones, perfectamente explicadas y capaces de resolver cualquier necesidad. Recuerde que todo lo que está en Internet no es gratis. Hay que respetar los derechos económicos y morales de los autores. Podcast asociado a la red de SOSPECHOSOS HABITUALES. Suscríbase con este feed: https://feedpress.me/sospechososhabituales

Tecnocincuentones
T50.- Episodio 227. Openverse: audios y gráficos libres de derechos

Tecnocincuentones

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2023 9:27


https://openverse.org/es le permite explorar mas de 700 millones de obras creativas, sin Copy Rignt, todas son Creative Commons, con cada una de las 8 opciones, perfectamente explicadas y capaces de resolver cualquier necesidad. Recuerde que todo lo que está en Internet no es gratis. Hay que respetar los derechos económicos y morales de los autores. Podcast asociado a la red de SOSPECHOSOS HABITUALES. Suscríbase con este feed: https://feedpress.me/sospechososhabituales

The WP Minute
Beta label removed, Assistant Pro, more acquisitions

The WP Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2023 8:39


After a time formatting bug caused a 24-hour delay, WordPress 6.2, code-named “Dolphy”, was released on March 29th. According to core contributor Jean-Baptiste Audras, 607 people from at least 50 countries were part of the release squad.Perhaps the biggest development in 6.2 is that the “beta” label has been removed from the Site Editor. The feature was first added in WordPress 5.9 and has undergone steady improvements. A new interface has been implemented this time around.Other enhancements include a revamped UI for both the Block Inserter and individual block controls. Direct access to Openverse media has also been added, allowing users to search, download, and insert openly-licensed content into their sites.For a rundown of key features, check out a handy guide from GoDaddy's Courtney Robertson. Links You Shouldn't MissWordPress.com alerted users that its access to the Twitter API was suspended on April 4. No specific reason was provided by Twitter. As Sarah Gooding of WP Tavern reports, the API powers Jetpack's Social Sharing feature. The situation was in limbo for a few hours, but service was eventually restored. During the outage, users couldn't automatically tweet out new content from their websites. Ironically (or not), Twitter recently announced a “new era of transparency” at the company.WordPress core contributor Mario Santos recently posted a proposal outlining the Interactivity API. This would enable developers to build blocks that are interactive on the front end. Santos notes examples including the ability to “heart” a post and performing an instant search. The project is currently experimental. A plugin is available for testing.The makers of Beaver Builder have announced the launch of Assistant Pro. It's a cloud storage and community template platform. Free page builder templates available for download. In addition, a marketplace allows users to both buy and sell. Templates can also be stored in the cloud and shared with team members.A couple of popular commercial plugins have released critical security fixes. Elementor Pro patched a vulnerability that impacted sites running the page builder in conjunction with WooCommerce. Meanwhile, Advanced Custom Fields PRO patched a PHP object injection vulnerability. If you use either plugin, be sure to update to the latest version.The name iThemes has long been recognizable in the WordPress ecosystem. The maker of popular plugins like BackupBuddy and iThemes Security Pro has undergone a name change. In order to better reflect their products, the company has announced a rebrand to SolidWP. iThemes customers shouldn't notice any pricing changes or support disruption during the transition.Links You Shouldn't MissWordPress.com alerted users that its access to the Twitter API was suspended on April 4. No specific reason was provided by Twitter. As Sarah Gooding of WP Tavern reports, the API powers Jetpack's Social Sharing feature. The situation was in limbo for a few hours, but service was eventually restored. During the outage, users couldn't automatically tweet out new content from their websites. Ironically (or not), Twitter recently announced a “new era of transparency” at the company.WordPress core contributor Mario Santos recently posted a proposal outlining the Interactivity API. This would enable developers to build blocks that are interactive on the front end. Santos notes examples including the ability to “heart” a post and performing an instant search. The project is currently experimental. A plugin is available for testing.The makers of Beaver Builder have announced the launch of Assistant Pro. It's a cloud storage and community template platform. Free page builder templates available for download. In addition, a marketplace allows users to both buy and sell. Templates can also be stored in the cloud and shared with team members.A couple of popular commercial plugins have released critical security fixes. Elementor Pro patched a vulnerability that impacted sites running the page builder in conjunction with WooCommerce. Meanwhile, Advanced Custom Fields PRO patched a PHP object injection vulnerability. If you use either plugin, be sure to update to the latest version.The name iThemes has long been recognizable in the WordPress ecosystem. The maker of popular plugins like BackupBuddy and iThemes Security Pro has undergone a name change. In order to better reflect their products, the company has announced a rebrand to SolidWP. iThemes customers shouldn't notice any pricing changes or support disruption during the transition. ★ Support this podcast ★

Press the Issue
Openverse, Block Styling and WordPress 6.2

Press the Issue

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2023 31:28


In this episode, Rob and Brian review the biggest new features of WordPress 6.2, the integration of the Openverse image library into WordPress Core, discuss whether "Full Site Editing" is really ready to move out of Beta, and whether the Openverse is proof that web privacy regulations have become a hindrance rather than a help for the typical web user.

WP Sofa
News: Kritik an Plugin Reviews, Zukunft klassischer Themes, Openverse

WP Sofa

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2023 132:36


Es gibt Kritik an den Plugin Reviews oder besser an der Vorgehensweise warum man in einen Review kommt. Außerdem haben wir über die Zukunft klassischer Themen gesprochen und dann war ja noch ein weiterer Aufreger: Das Openverse.

WP Builds
This Week in WordPress #243

WP Builds

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 90:42


The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 27th February 2023.

The WP Minute
Openverse concerns and more Awesome Motive acquisitions

The WP Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2023 5:07


WordPress 6.2 is slated for release on March 28. Among its most impactful new features will be the integration of the Openverse media search. This will allow users to add images, audio, and video that are available via a Creative Commons license.While Openverse integration adds a layer of convenience, there was some debate about how the feature initially worked. As Sarah Gooding of WP Tavern reports, the first iteration (released in version 15.1 of the Gutenberg plugin) simply hotlinked to images, rather than uploading files to the user's website by default.Users had the option to upload the image via the WordPress Media Library. However, the default hotlinking behavior meant that some users would inevitably leave things as they are. This could run afoul of privacy regulations like GDPR in the European Union.Meanwhile, WordPress core contributor Jeremy Herve created a ticket that called attention to the potential issue. Others have since raised questions regarding usage rights - including the right to crop or otherwise modify media.The debate has led to a change in plans. WordPress contributors reacted swiftly and now the feature will upload Openverse images by default. A fallback has also been implemented that warns users when an image couldn't be uploaded. Check out WP Tavern's follow up for more details on how things evolved.Links You Shouldn't MissThere are more acquisitions to report in the WordPress space. First, Caseproof, makers of the MemberPress plugin, have acquired rival MemberMouse. In the announcement, MemberPress Creator and CEO Blair Williams says both products have different audiences and thus will remain separate offerings.Next up, Syed Balkhi announced that tutorial service WP101 has been acquired by Awesome Motive. Balkhi notes that the acquisition furthers his goal of creating the “best class-room style WordPress training videos to help WordPress grow in enterprise, government agencies, as well as at the school and collegiate level.”The democratization of publishing is a stated goal of WordPress. To see proof of it in action, look no further than the Prison Journalism Project. Sarah Gooding profiled the organization and its use of WordPress to help incarcerated writers to connect with the outside world.From the Grab BagNow it's time to take a look at some other interesting topics shared by our contributors.The popular All in One SEO plugin recently patched two security vulnerabilities. It's recommended that users upgrade to the latest version as soon as possible. Security firm Wordfence provided further detail on their blog.Back in July 2022, we reported that WordPress blog WPLift was sold to an undisclosed buyer. It's been revealed to The WP Minute that Boston-based agency UnlimitedWP is the new owner.A new proposal aims to display more topic-based meetups in the WordPress News & Events dashboard widget.Take in the sights of the recent WordCamp Asia with BobWP's recap of the event.With so many recent changes to WordPress content creation and theming, web designers need to adjust. Justin Tadlock explored the topic on the WordPress Developer Blog.Speaking of themes, developer Anders Norén announced that his collection of free block themes are now compatible with features added in WordPress 6.1.If you're looking for some inspirational stories, People of WordPress has you covered. Recent profiles Hauwa Abashiya and Daniel Kossmann are worth a read.Thanks to all of the members who shared these links today: Jeff ChandlerAmber HindsAbha Thakor ★ Support this podcast ★

Freelandev - Vivir del desarrollo en WordPress
#202 – Problemas con WooCommerce Subscriptions, WordPress moderno y pruebas con chatGPT

Freelandev - Vivir del desarrollo en WordPress

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 40:21


Síguenos en: ¡Buenas! Volvemos una semana más comentando nuestro día a día, reuniones, problemas, proyectos con WordPress "moderno" y pruebas varias... ¡un poco de todo! ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Empezando el nuevo proyecto, finalmente FSE + WPML Problema WooCommerce Subscriptions que caducan al cabo de 1 año Semana Nahuai Reunión de Genesis Shapers donde nos hicieron una demo de una nueva herramienta para gestionar patrones de bloques. Meetup Terrassa en la que Ester Serra nos habló de casos prácticos de integraciones con WooCommerce. Las primeras pruebas con chatGPT y código dejaron un poco que desear. Reunión en el canal de Slack de sostenibilidad en WordPress dando los primeros pasos para crear un documento que sirva como partida para crear WordCamps más sostenibles. También comentamos cómo mejorar el plugin de WPSustainability. Contenido Nahuai 2 nuevos tutoriales en Código Genesis de los cuales destaca: Novedades https://updraftplus.com/updraftplus-acquires-wp-overnight/ La web de Openverse se ha movido de wordpress.org/openverse to openverse.org Ya está disponible la segunda beta de WordPress 6.2 (que incorporará los cambios hasta la versión 15.0-15.1 de Gutenberg) Tip de la semana https://wpfront.page/ Menciones Mar y Ester me dan feedback sobre Código Genesis (reforzar mensaje y posibilidad de vender snippets sueltos). Matizar la frase de que Genesis no apuesta por el FSE.

Freelandev - Vivir del desarrollo en WordPress
#202 – Problemas con WooCommerce Subscriptions, WordPress moderno y pruebas con chatGPT

Freelandev - Vivir del desarrollo en WordPress

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2023 40:21


Síguenos en: ¡Buenas! Volvemos una semana más comentando nuestro día a día, reuniones, problemas, proyectos con WordPress "moderno" y pruebas varias... ¡un poco de todo! ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Empezando el nuevo proyecto, finalmente FSE + WPML Problema WooCommerce Subscriptions que caducan al cabo de 1 año Semana Nahuai Reunión de Genesis Shapers donde nos hicieron una demo de una nueva herramienta para gestionar patrones de bloques. Meetup Terrassa en la que Ester Serra nos habló de casos prácticos de integraciones con WooCommerce. Las primeras pruebas con chatGPT y código dejaron un poco que desear. Reunión en el canal de Slack de sostenibilidad en WordPress dando los primeros pasos para crear un documento que sirva como partida para crear WordCamps más sostenibles. También comentamos cómo mejorar el plugin de WPSustainability. Contenido Nahuai 2 nuevos tutoriales en Código Genesis de los cuales destaca: Novedades https://updraftplus.com/updraftplus-acquires-wp-overnight/ La web de Openverse se ha movido de wordpress.org/openverse to openverse.org Ya está disponible la segunda beta de WordPress 6.2 (que incorporará los cambios hasta la versión 15.0-15.1 de Gutenberg) Tip de la semana https://wpfront.page/ Menciones Mar y Ester me dan feedback sobre Código Genesis (reforzar mensaje y posibilidad de vender snippets sueltos). Matizar la frase de que Genesis no apuesta por el FSE.

Blogs y Blogging: El PODCAST de Blogpocket

Noticias, ideas y trucos sobre WordPress, Gutenberg, Full Site Editing y más. Este vídeo se publicó originalmente en Blogpocket.com el 17 de febrero de 2023. Contenido del episodio nº 26 del videopodcast HECHO CON BLOQUES: 00:00 - Intro 00:27 - The Newsletter Plugin. Con este plugin podemos gestionar boletines de noticias desde nuestro propio WordPress, desprendiéndonos de soluciones de terceros (MailChimp, etc.). Sus add-ons dan la posibilidad de añadir funciones. Entre ellos, el add-on SMTP evitará que tus mensajes se consideren inseguros o spam por parte de los clientes de email. Otro fundamental es Instasend, con el que puedes elaborar tus boletines desde el editor de bloques de WordPress. 05:13 - Algunas novedades interesantes en Gutenberg 15 son la integración co Openverse y la configuración, mediante CSS adicional, de cada bloque independientemente, esto último desde la opción de estilos globales de la edición del sitio. 08:00 - Un wapuu para celebrar el 20º aniversario de WordPress. 08:54 - Un haiku, para celebrar la beta 2 de WordPress 6.2, leído por Lisa Simpson. 09:43 - Epílogo

The WP Minute
Full Site Editing stripped of the 'beta' label

The WP Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 5:11


WordPress 6.2 is scheduled for release on March 28, 2023. But it's never too early to start preparations. Therefore, you may want to check out the first beta release, which is now available for testing.The first major release of 2023 brings a plethora of enhancements to the Site and Block Editors. Some features, such as color coded template parts within the Site Editor, focus on improved usability. But there are a few big picture changes as well.For one, the ability to search and download Openverse images will be included in the Block Editor. This allows anyone to grab Creative Commons licensed media from within their website. Also included are a revamped Navigation block, a Style Book feature for creating custom styles, and sticky blocks.To see what else is new, GoDaddy Pro's Courtney Robertson has published a detailed guide on WordPress 6.2.Links You Shouldn't MissWhen it comes to WordPress core, newer doesn't always mean faster. Core committer Adam Silverstein has submitted a proposal to change that. According to a report from WP Tavern, Silverstein's proposal calls for automated performance monitoring. The goal is to catch potential problems before they reach the average user.Last December, we reported on the WP Community Collective (WPCC). The not-for-profit organization aims to financially support contributions to the WordPress project. This week it was announced that Alex Stine has been selected as the first WPCC Fellow. Stine is currently a member of the WordPress Accessibility team and will continue in that role. The WPCC is still looking for donations in order to fully fund Stine's fellowship.Twitter recently announced that free access to its API will no longer be available as of February 9, 2023. That's likely to impact both WordPress plugin developers and end users. Core contributor Mika Epstein posted a notice about the change and asked developers to investigate what this new policy means for their products.From the Grab BagNow it's time to take a look at some other interesting topics shared by our contributors.The “freemium” product model is a popular one within the WordPress ecosystem. MasterWP's Nyasha Green and Rob Howard discussed their experiences with building freemium products on a recent episode of the Press the Issue podcast.Applications to attend the 2023 WordPress Community Summit are now being accepted. The invitation-only event for project contributors will take place from August 22-23 in National Harbor, MD, prior to WordCamp US.Is there anything ChatGPT can't do? ZDNet's David Gewirtz recently wrote about his successful attempt at using the AI tool to build a WordPress plugin.Speaking of AI, Microsoft has announced that its Bing search engine and Edge browser will be enhanced by OpenAI technology. A limited preview is underway for Bing, with an expansion due in the coming weeks.The WordPress Training team is looking for feedback regarding user learning preferences. Fill out their individual learner survey to let the team know your thoughts.Video of the weekSubscribe at youtube.com/@wpminuteThe WP Minute takes a closer look at ★ Support this podcast ★

The WP Minute
WordPress phases updated, Awesome Motive buys Thrive Themes, and more!

The WP Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 5:28


What's on tap for WordPress core in 2023? Project executive director Josepha Haden Chomphosy recently outlined some big picture goals. By design, the post is light on detail. Haden Chomphosy says the list represents a view from “10,000 feet”.Perhaps the biggest item mentioned is the completion Phase 2 of the Gutenberg project, which focuses on the customization of the Block and Site editors. From there, the project will begin exploring Phase 3, where collaborative functionality will be on the table.Other areas of interest include improvements to media management, adding Openverse search in WordPress core, and the return of the WordPress Community Summit.The goals are ambitious and there is a lot of work to be done. With that, Haden Chomphosy also put out a call for volunteers.Links You Shouldn't MissFor WordPress product makers, identifying a target audience can be challenging. There is often difficulty in balancing new features, support, and marketing. After a few years of catering to publishers of all sizes, Newsletter Glue's Lesley Sim has decided to train her product's focus on newsrooms and media companies. In a blog post, Sim explained the reasons behind the shift and what it means for current customers.The folks at Awesome Motive have made their second major acquisition this month. This time around, they've purchased Thrive Themes. Known for the Thrive Architect and Thrive Theme Builder products, the company also touches on the LMS, automation, and marketing niches.Wordfence has released their annual State of WordPress Security report. Takeaways include a higher number of reported vulnerabilities, while fewer of them were categorized as “critical unauthenticated”. One constant is the need to keep your WordPress installation up-to-date. Neglect is still a huge factor when it comes to security. ★ Support this podcast ★

The WP Minute
State of The Word 2022

The WP Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 94:45


State of the Word 2022 has just completed another hybrid presentation. A mix of livestream on the official WordPress YouTube channel and in-person attendees traveled to NYC to watch Matt Mullenweg and others update us on all things WordPress. We'll cover some of the highlights in today's post. Tune in to listen to the complete recording of the event on our podcast or in the player above. Thanks for being a WP Minute reader/listener/viewer! Consider supporting us through a virtual coffee or joining our membership. Video highlights Key takeaways Gutenberg will be bigger than WordPress itself. To mobile apps and the web. bbPress forms now have Gutenberg Using Blocks Everywhere plugin. Will be embedded in BuddyPress. PEW Research using Gutenberg Day One App using Gutenberg in web app Mobile Gutenberg is dual-licensed GPL & MPL Tumblr using Gutenberg 500 meetups doubled their events in 2022 1 WordCamp in 2021 to 22 in 2022 Community Summit is coming back WordPress is turning 20 next year Doing a new 10 year update to the "Milestones Book" 12,000 People took a Learn.WordPress course New blog and showcase pages on WordPress.org bringing Jazz design languages over 22 million images. 1.1 million audio files. OpenVerse scours the web for Creative Commons images & other media. Now launched audio."Not fully embedded into WordPress yet" Create themes just using blocks & style variations We're at the end of Phase 2 of Gutenberg initial development Create block theme "plugin" allows you to make themes from blocks Zen mode is a new writing experience Showing off "locked-in patterns." A way for consultants to pass sites off to clients. 1399 Release contributors New core contributors to WordPress. "Think of them like the Wikipedia super-editors" WordPress is what it is because of community "Think of WordPress.org as an App Store for WordPress" Matt likes to think of the community as fractal Allow theme & plugin developers to self-identify as what their project goals are through a new taxonomy. Will be launching this month. Phase 3 Gutenberg: Collaboration. Improvements for editorial workflows. Also bringing in OpenVerse. Share your experience with the WordPress 2022 survey Matt was excited about OpenAI and Stable Diffusion WordPress Playground. A way to experience the entirety of the WordPress stack in the browser, without installing dependencies. 100% in the browser using web assembly. How can we make WordPress that is a gift to the world for decades to come? "WordPress belongs to all of us, but really we're taking care of it for the next generation." Important links wordpress.tumblr.com Engineawesome.com using Gutenberg communitysummit.wordpress.org/2023 WP20.wordpress.net learn.wordpress.org wordpress.org/openverse https://wordpress.org/plugins/create-block-theme/ Make.wordpress.org https://developer.wordpress.org/playground

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)
Un millón de audios libres de derechos

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 4:31


El proyecto de Openverse ha alcanzado un nuevo hito: disponer de más de un millón de ficheros de audio para su uso libre.

WP Briefing
Episode 43: Openverse & Photo Directory– What Are They, and How Are They Different?

WP Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2022 6:45


Join Josepha as she explores the differences between Openverse & Photo Directory, two resources for openly licensed media in the WordPress project.

The WP Minute
Still not on Trac

The WP Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 3:59


The saga of WordPress.org active install data continues as more details trickle out. At WP Tavern, Sarah Gooding reported on an appearance by WordPress contributor Samuel Otto Wood on the WPwatercooler podcast. Wood says the decision to remove the data originated from a private Slack conversation amongst contributors that was started by WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg back in May. It has also been revealed that the removal was not due to security or privacy issues, as previously indicated. According to Wood, the data chart was removed because “by and large, nobody was using them”. Regardless of the reasoning behind the decision or worthiness of the data, no official outreach appears to have been made by project leadership to the developer community. Meanwhile, WordPress community members continue to voice concerns via a Trac ticket started by RebelCode CEO Mark Zahra. The ticket was created on September 30 and has over 100 comments. Links You Shouldn't Miss The first ever WordPress Documentation team Contributor Day took place on Tuesday, October 25. The virtual event was held to help team members catch up on tasks and onboard new contributors. Development agency Human Made has published 1001 ways to implement Gutenberg blocks. The guide includes a handy flowchart for determining what blocks to use and when to use them. The inaugural WPWealthBuilder Summit has put a call out for speakers and sponsors. The virtual event focuses on building personal wealth through WordPress and takes place on February 3, 2023. Sarah Gooding of WP Tavern reports that the Openverse Audio Catalog now boasts 800,000 files that are available free of charge. Formerly known as Creative Commons Search, Openverse is now part of the WordPress project. Classifieds listings buy yours WebDevStudios WebDevStudios is seeking a full time, remote Engineering Manager candidate interested in joining our growing team.Sitewide Sales Are you literally losing sleep on Black Friday? Schedule your WordPress site's Black Friday sale so you can sleep off Thanksgiving dinner.GapScout Sign-Up for Early Access - AI that scans reviews (on WordPress.org or elsewhere), revealing to you the most profitable opportunities!WP Mayor Reach a larger, targeted audience of WordPress users with your Black Friday and Cyber Monday offers. Get them listed on WP Mayor. F

Wine-Dark Sea Stories
Night of the Werewolf | A Tale of Terror from Ancient Rome

Wine-Dark Sea Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 10:18


Terrifying creatures stalked the dead of night in ancient Rome, as a man named Niceros has learned all too well. A guest at a lavish dinner party thrown by the fabulously wealthy Gaius Trimalchio, Niceros reveals a hair-raising encounter from his past: the time he met a dreaded werewolf! A story from ancient Roman literature, based on Petronius' novel Satyricon (mid-1st century AD; 61-62) --- CREDITS: Music by Kevin MacLeod Episode Thumbnail Images: Bronze head of a wolf (Roman, 1st century AD) / Background from Openverse and Storyblocks WDS Logo Image: Kylix with Apollo playing the lyre and pouring a libation (c. 470 BC, Delphi Archeological Museum) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Torréfaction
Torréfaction #216 : Diablo Immortal, Fade arrive dans Valorant, Newcastle dans Apex, Bêta Overwatch 2, Openverse, We Own this City et Musk se paye Twitter

Torréfaction

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2022 31:58


Cette semaine : Diablo Immortal, Fade débarque dans Valorant, Newcastle débarque dans Apex, Overwatch 2 - Beta (+ Sojourn), WP annonce Openverse, Barry : la saison 3 a commencé !, Tokyo Vice, The Crystal Method - The Trip Out, et Musk se paye Twitter. Lisez plutôt Torréfaction #216 : Diablo Immortal, Fade arrive dans Valorant, Newcastle dans Apex, Bêta Overwatch 2, Openverse, We Own this City et Musk se paye Twitter avec sa vraie mise en page sur Geekzone. Pensez à vos rétines.

Un billete a Chattanooga
Episodio 152: Bancos de imágenes y Openverse

Un billete a Chattanooga

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2022 82:32


Uno de los recursos que más utilizamos en el desempeño de nuestra actividad profesional en internet es, sin duda, el de los bancos de imágenes, gratuitas o no. Por ello, en este programa hablamos de cómo los usamos y qué cosas deberías tener en cuenta para no perder demasiado tiempo y/o dinero con ellos. Una […] El episodio Episodio 152: Bancos de imágenes y Openverse es un podcast de Un billete a Chattanooga.

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
FLOSS Weekly 671: Wordpress Evolutions

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 68:06


Matt Mullenweg, founder, CEO and president of Automattic, talks to Doc Searls and Jonathan Bennett about how Wordpress—their main product and open source project—is the "dark matter of the Web." He also tells us what's up with Tumblr, Openverse, WooCommerce, the Gutenberg block editor, and other projects among the many the company is up to. Hosts: Doc Searls and Jonathan Bennett Guest: Matt Mullenweg Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: bitwarden.com/twit Compiler - FLOSS NewRelic.com/FLOSS

FLOSS Weekly (MP3)
FLOSS Weekly 671: WordPress Evolutions - Matt Mullenweg, WordPress

FLOSS Weekly (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 68:06


Matt Mullenweg, founder, CEO and president of Automattic, talks to Doc Searls and Jonathan Bennett about how WordPress—their main product and open source project—is the "dark matter of the Web." He also tells us what's up with Tumblr, Openverse, WooCommerce, the Gutenberg block editor, and other projects among the many the company is up to. Hosts: Doc Searls and Jonathan Bennett Guest: Matt Mullenweg Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: bitwarden.com/twit Compiler - FLOSS NewRelic.com/FLOSS

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
FLOSS Weekly 671: WordPress Evolutions

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 68:25


Matt Mullenweg, founder, CEO and president of Automattic, talks to Doc Searls and Jonathan Bennett about how WordPress—their main product and open source project—is the "dark matter of the Web." He also tells us what's up with Tumblr, Openverse, WooCommerce, the Gutenberg block editor, and other projects among the many the company is up to. Hosts: Doc Searls and Jonathan Bennett Guest: Matt Mullenweg Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: bitwarden.com/twit Compiler - FLOSS NewRelic.com/FLOSS

FLOSS Weekly (Video HD)
FLOSS Weekly 671: WordPress Evolutions - Matt Mullenweg, WordPress

FLOSS Weekly (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 68:25


Matt Mullenweg, founder, CEO and president of Automattic, talks to Doc Searls and Jonathan Bennett about how WordPress—their main product and open source project—is the "dark matter of the Web." He also tells us what's up with Tumblr, Openverse, WooCommerce, the Gutenberg block editor, and other projects among the many the company is up to. Hosts: Doc Searls and Jonathan Bennett Guest: Matt Mullenweg Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: bitwarden.com/twit Compiler - FLOSS NewRelic.com/FLOSS

The WP Minute
WordPress community still struggles with diversity & inclusion

The WP Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2022 4:30


News Matt Mullenweg, founder and CEO of Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com, made the news again (this time with the Wall Street Journal). He talks about ‘asynchronous work' and why he thinks hybrid models will die out.  Automattic employees are already living the work from anywhere model and are able to adjust their work schedules as needed. Anne McCarthy is back with another round of testing this time for the WordPress Photo directory. By adding your photos here, they will automatically appear in Openverse, a search engine for openly licensed media. Volunteers are needed to test and provide feedback on media-related features in WordPress. Anyone is welcome to contribute, and feedback is open until February 23. Eric Karkovac wrote a post on the WordPress photo directory. If you would like an understanding of how licensing images came about and to see an early review of WordPress media go check out his article. From Our Contributors and Producers Many in the WordPress community have been feeling the weight of growth and change and frankly everything over the last couple of years. Cory Miller shared an update on his “crash and burn”. Many of us are not alone in this area and support Cory along with his team over at PostStatus. The organizers of WordCamp Europe 2022, were called out recently for a lack of diversity on the Organizing Team. They are addressing that now citing the team cares deeply about diversity, equity, and inclusion. Click the link to read their updated communication. Angela Jin has started an open discussion on diversity as well over on make.wordpress.org. Make sure to participate in this very important discussion and provide feedback. Eric Mann wrote a post on his first month using WordPress 5.9 from an experienced WordPress contributor perspective. If you would like to see the good, the bad and the future of WordPress this post is worth a few minutes of your time. Sarah Gooding over at the WPTavern covered the latest with the German court fining a website owner for violating the GDPR by using Google-Hosted Fonts. If you are using Google fonts and are subject to European regulations, you may want to review how you are using them to be in compliance. Sarah's colleague Justin Tadlock wrote an article stating that Block Editor Sidebar Panels are the new Admin Notices. Product marketers will be interwoven with the editing experience for the foreseeable future. Or until an official mechanism for products to notify users of upgrades is offered in core, as WP Minute correspondent Spencer Forman comments. Business news! Convesio Raises $5M in funding to further develop its scalable WordPress Hosting Platform. This funding will help to deliver a consistently fast experience with their customers.  MasterWP.co, a newsletter for WordPress professionals, announced that Howard Development & Consulting has acquired the publication.  From Alex Denning Some news: after 5 years and 249 issues, @BinaryMoon and I have written our final issue of http://MasterWP.co. @howarddcweb have acquired MasterWP, and will be taking over bringing you insightful, quality WordPress news and analysis from next week. Thanks to all of the members who shared these links today:  Jeff ChandlerBirgit Pauli-HaackEric Karkovack If you would like to contribute news, especially in the WooCommerce space please find us @thewpminute or use our contact form at thewpminute.com and reach out to us. New Members We would like to welcome our new member this week Lawrence Ladomery from convesio.com. ★ Support this podcast ★

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)
Lo de las imágenes

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 8:20


Hace ya que se ha lanzado Openverse y WordPress Photos… ¿cómo se van a incorporar a WordPress? Esa es la pregunta que intenta resolver el equipo de Test.

BlogAid Podcast
Tips Tuesday – TikTok Videos, Site Owner Guide, Openverse, DeSo Blockchain

BlogAid Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 24:11


Tips this week include: • ADA and UX workshop in the DIY SEO course this week • Where I'm at with making TikTok videos • Some encouragement for those just starting out with video • Why I'm returning Heartwood Art back to a hobby blog • Why I'm starting another YouTube channel or two • The DIY Site Owner Guide is live • Why I hate the new cPanel interface • My concerns with ModSecurity • What to check when using free images from Openverse • Why Meta is focusing hard on videos • What Spotify losing artists means for ushering in the Creator Economy • Will DeSo be the new decentralized social blockchain winner • How streaming bots are disrupting the music industry and what it means for NFTs

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)
No solo WordPress tiene nueva versión

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2022 6:52


WordPress 5.9 ha visto la luz, pero no solo esta aplicación trae novedades. También lo hacen WP-CLI, Openverse, Gutenberg o las Apps.

Python Bytes
#268 Wait, you can Google that?

Python Bytes

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2022 45:09


Watch the live stream: Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by us: Check out the courses over at Talk Python And Brian's book too! Brian #1: (draft) PEP 679 -- Allow parentheses in assert statements Pablo Galindo Salgado This is in draft, not approved, and not scheduled for any release But it seems like a really good idea to me. assert(1 == 2, "seems like it should fail") will always pass currently since the tuple (False,"seems like it should fail") is a non-empty tuple. Current Python will emit a warning >>> assert(1 == 2, "seems like it should fail") [stdin]:1: SyntaxWarning: assertion is always true, perhaps remove parentheses? But really, why not just change the language to allow assert with or without parens. Also would allow multi-line assert statements more easily: assert ( very very long expression, "very very long " "message", ) I hope this is a slam dunk and gets in ASAP. Michael #2: Everything I googled as a dev by Sophie Koonin In an attempt to dispel the idea that if you have to google stuff you're not a proper engineer, this is a list of nearly everything I googled in a week at work Rather than my posting a huge list, check out the day logs on her post Worth calling out a few: Expecting a parsed GraphQL document. Perhaps you need to wrap the query string in a "gql" tag? - said React upgrade then started causing some super fun errors. semantic HTML contact details - wanted to check if the [HTML_REMOVED] tag was relevant here editing host file - desperate times (and it didn't even work) Madison #3: PyCascades 2022! Another year of excellent and diverse talks across an array of subjects. Talks from some well known folks (Thursday Bram, Jay Miller) as well as first time speakers (Joseph Riddle, Isaac Na) PSF's DE&I Panel is doing a meet & greet, and they have a survey they'd like Python community members to fill out. Socials Friday & Saturday night, sprints on Sunday. Tickets are still available! Brian #4: Strict Python function parameters Seth Michael Larson We have keyword only parameters def process_data(data, *, encoding="ascii"): ... notice the * encoding has to be a keyword argument, cannot be positional. We have position only parameters: def process_data(data, /, encoding="ascii"): ... notice the / data has to be positional, cannot be passed in as a keyword argument Combine the two: def process_data(data, /, *, encoding="ascii"): ... Now data has to be positional, and encoding has to be a keyword, if present. This way a function really can only be called as intended and all uses of the function will be consistent. This is a good thing. There are many benefits, including empowering library authors to make changes without weird behaviors cropping up in user code. Commentary: extra syntax may be confusing for some new users. For a lot of library API entry points, I think this makes a lot of sense. Michael #5: mureq - vendored requests mureq is a single-file, zero-dependency alternative to python-requests Intended to be vendored in-tree by Linux systems software and other lightweight applications. Doesn't support connection pooling (but neither does requests.get()). Uses much less memory Avoids supply chain attack vulnerabilities Consider my prod branch until PRs #2 and #3 are merged. Madison #6: Openverse No, not Metaverse! Previously “CC Search” Search engine for openly licensed media, for free and public use/remix of content. Currently images & audio, hope to include video, text, 3D models down the line. Start your search here Extras Michael: We now have playable times in the transcript section (example). Very cool tool for building regex-es I used for the above: regex101.com Next video is out: Do you even need loops in Python? A Python short by Michael Kennedy Remember, we have full-text search Brian: pip-secure-install - from Brett Cannon Python Testing with pytest is, when I last checked, the #2 bestseller at Pragmatic so cool My Maui trip was also a work trip. Gave me time to completely re-read the book, make notes, and make last minute changes. Changes went in this week and tonight is my “pencils down” date. This is getting real, folks. Thanks to everyone for buying beta copies and supporting the re-write. Madison: spd.watch - new police accountability/information tool for the Seattle area Shoutout to just (mentioned in Ep 242) ghcr.io - free docker image hosting for open source projects, easy integration with GitHub Actions Joke: via Josh Thurston How did the hacker get away from the police? He just ransomware. That joke makes me WannaCry… Where do you find a hacker? In decrypt.

Do the Woo - A WooCommerce Podcast
Do the Woo Roundtable: State of the Word 2021

Do the Woo - A WooCommerce Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 41:05


We have a lively discussion in this episode on the State of the Word, community, full site editor, Gutenberg, OpenVerse and Web 3.0

The WP Minute
Reflections WP

The WP Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2021 7:20


With no major acquisitions, events, or feature releases this week, we can all take an exhale of relief. Today's theme is: Reflection.  WP Minute Contributor Joe Casabona reflects on the State of the Word hosted by Matt Mullenweg. He shares strong opinions on how you might give back to WordPress by taking care of yourself, first. “When I was in college, I learned about Saint Ignatius and the idea of Cura personalis, or care of the entire person. I'd like to think of contributing more like this” WP Minute Producer Michelle Frechette represented Post Status in an interview with Matt Mullenweg about acquisitions in the WordPress ecosystem. Matt says Automattic is participating in all parts of the ecosystem from investment to purchasing companies. Nexcess shares 22 WordPress predictions to look forward to in 2022. WP Minute Producer Daniel Schutzsmith was quoted on his take of the Full Site Editing Knowledge Gap.“As block-based themes and full site editing take over the WordPress landscape, they may create a knowledge gap among WordPress users,”  David Bisset asks us to reflect on what we think the biggest news items for WordPress are this year. Send him your message to be included in the round-up. Reflecting on all of the…awards?  The WP Weekly Awards for 2021 concluded. Elementor claimed the most voted page builder, Yoast won for best SEO plugin, and I…came in 4th place for the Matt Report podcast with the WP Minute ever so slightly behind, holding down the 15th spot.  I can't wait for next year! And speaking of audio… @Francisco on WP Slack has shared an update about Openverse and where the next iteration is leading us. He shares some mockups of what searching and discovering audio + images might look like on the platform.  From the grabbag Daniel Schutzsmith started a WordPress Twitter community Protocol asks if Matt Mullenweg can save the internet  Treehouse was sold Contributor audio segments by: Michelle SchulpMichelle Frechette Thanks to all of the members who shared these links today: Jeff ChandlerJoe CasabonaMichelle FrechetteDaniel Schutzsmith You can buy me a coffee to support the show or join as a member for $79 for the year to get access to the private Discord server. Become part of our merry band of WordPress newsies and get involved in the weekly WordPress news like everyone I mentioned above.

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)
Un mundo de contenidos libres

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 7:15


Con el lanzamiento de Openverse, WordPress retoma un proyecto de buscador global de contenidos libres de derechos; imágenes, audio y vídeo.

Divi Chat
Ep 227 – State of the Word 2021 Watch Party

Divi Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021 80:00


State of the Word is the annual keynote address delivered by Matt Mullenweg, co-founder of WordPress. Instead of a typical Divi Chat episode, the panel will be hosting a watch party to virtually attend State of the Word together with all of you! From the wordpress.org blog: "Join Matt as he provides a retrospective of 2021, discusses the latest trends he's seeing, celebrates the community's amazing wins, and explores the future. Expect to hear about a range of topics, from WordPress 5.9 and Openverse to Web3 and non-fungible tokens (NFTs)." This should be an enlightening hour! See you there! Hosts Present: Stephanie Hudson – FocusWP / FB Tim Strifler – Tim's Divi Plugins / Tim's Divi Modules Eric Dingler – In Transit Studios / Coastal City Creative / https://diviagencycoach.com/ Sarah Oates – Endure Web Studios / FB / @endureweb Follow us on Social Media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/divichatpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/divichatpodcast/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/divichat/ Website: https://divi.chat/ Leave a (5 ⭐) Review: https://ratethispodcast.com/divichat Join us Live on Youtube or Facebook every Tuesday @ ☀️ 2 pm Los Angeles ⛅️ 5 pm New York

Divi Chat
Ep 227 – State of the Word 2021 Watch Party

Divi Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021 80:00


State of the Word is the annual keynote address delivered by Matt Mullenweg, co-founder of WordPress. Instead of a typical Divi Chat episode, the panel will be hosting a watch party to virtually attend State of the Word together with all of you! From the wordpress.org blog: "Join Matt as he provides a retrospective of 2021, discusses the latest trends he's seeing, celebrates the community's amazing wins, and explores the future. Expect to hear about a range of topics, from WordPress 5.9 and Openverse to Web3 and non-fungible tokens (NFTs)." This should be an enlightening hour! See you there! Hosts Present: Stephanie Hudson – FocusWP / FB Tim Strifler – Tim's Divi Plugins / Tim's Divi Modules Eric Dingler – In Transit Studios / Coastal City Creative / https://diviagencycoach.com/ Sarah Oates – Endure Web Studios / FB / @endureweb Follow us on Social Media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/divichatpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/divichatpodcast/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/divichat/ Website: https://divi.chat/ Leave a (5 ⭐) Review: https://ratethispodcast.com/divichat Join us Live on Youtube or Facebook every Tuesday @ ☀️ 2 pm Los Angeles ⛅️ 5 pm New York

WordPress Radio
234. PHP 8.1, PHP 8.0 y PHP 7.4

WordPress Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 59:43


Openverse ya es una realidad, y también una larga lista de versiones de WordPress, Gutenberg, BuddyPress y, también, de PHP.

WordPress Radio
234. PHP 8.1, PHP 8.0 y PHP 7.4

WordPress Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 59:43


Openverse ya es una realidad, y también una larga lista de versiones de WordPress, Gutenberg, BuddyPress y, también, de PHP.

WP Builds
This Week in WordPress #188

WP Builds

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 79:07


This week's WordPress news for the week commencing Monday 29th November 2021

WP Tavern
#10 – What's in WordPress 5.9, and What Is Openverse?

WP Tavern

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 65:52


On the podcast today we have something new. Until now I've interviewed one person at a time, but today there's three people on the call, Birgit Pauli-Haack, Marcus Kazmierczak and Zack Krida. So WordPress 5.9 is just around the corner. Initially scheduled for release in December 2021, it has now been pushed back until January 2022. There's a lot in this release, most notably Full Site Editing and we chat through the highlights. The we move on to talk about Openverse, which is a search engine for openly-licensed media. We get into how media is licensed and why this project is a good fit for WordPress, and we round off with some thoughts on how it will integrate with the Block Editor in the future.

Jukebox
#10 – What's in WordPress 5.9, and What Is Openverse?

Jukebox

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2021 65:52


About this episode. On the podcast today we have something new. Until now I've interviewed one person at a time, but today there's three people on the call, Birgit Pauli-Haack, Marcus Kazmierczak and Zack Krida. Birgit is a Developer Advocate for WordPress and is an ardent supporter of the Gutenberg project. She publishes the Gutenberg Times and co-hosts the Gutenberg Changelog podcast. Marcus is a team leader at Automattic. His team is involved in Gutenberg, and has been working on it from the start. Marcus is also the documentation lead for the 5.9 release of WordPress. Zack is the team lead of the Openverse project, which will be the focus of the later part of the podcast. So WordPress 5.9 is just around the corner. Initially scheduled for release in December 2021, it has now been pushed back until January 2022. It's an important release for a multitude of reasons, but perhaps the headline item is Full Site Editing. Full Site Editing, or FSE, will change the way that WordPress websites are built. Areas which were once the domain of template files and of developers will now be editable from inside the Block Editor. The intention is to make everything much easier to work with, but it's a big departure from how things have been done until now. We're moving into an era of Block Themes, Template Parts, Theme.json files and much more. But what does all this mean? Well, Birgit and Marcus are here to explain what's coming in WordPress 5.9, why the changes have been made, and how you can make use of them. Later in the podcast we pivot and have a discussion with Zack about Openverse. If you've not heard of Openverse, it is a search engine for openly-licensed media. It makes it possible to find media from a growing catalogue of freely contributed assets. The project has been going for a while (it was previously called CC Search), but was recently brought under the stewardship of the WordPress Project. We talk about how you can make use of Openverse and what kind of media is available there. We get into how media is licensed and why this project is a good fit for WordPress, and we round off with some thoughts on how it will integrate with the Block Editor in the future.

WP Tavern
#5 – Robert Jacobi on Why He's Putting Gutenberg First

WP Tavern

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2021 43:35


On the podcast today we have Robert Jacobi. Robert is Director of WordPress at Cloudways. He's been working with open source software for almost twenty years and so today we have a broad discussion about his 'Gutenberg First' approach as well as how the project is evolving. We also chat about WordPress events and Openverse.

Jukebox
#5 – Robert Jacobi on Why He's Putting Gutenberg First

Jukebox

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2021 43:35


About this episode. On the podcast today we have Robert Jacobi. Robert is Director of WordPress at Cloudways. He's been working with open source software for almost twenty years, and has been the president of Joomla, a member of Make WordPress Hosting and contributor to ICANN At-Large. He is well known for his public speaking about open source and so the discussion today is broad and thought provoking. We talk about Robert's ‘Gutenberg First' approach in which he places the WordPress Block Editor at the heart of all that he does. He sees Gutenberg as a critical component for WordPress' future; a future in which as yet unimagined technologies will be built on top of Gutenberg and leverage the ‘atomic' way data is stored. This leads to a discussion on how 3rd party developers will be able to use Gutenberg as an application platform, with unique pathways to create, store and display content. The heritage of Gutenberg's development is also discussed. Right from the start we knew that the intention of the project was ambitious; it's aim to become a full site editor was explained at the outset. This has led to comparisons with other editing tools and Robert takes on why he thinks that the incremental steps that the Gutenberg project has taken are making it a vital part of WordPress. We also look forward and get into the subject of how technology never stands still. The underpinnings of WordPress are shifting. New skills and tools will need to be learned, but that does not mean that existing ones are obsolete. Shifting gears, we move into community events and how we've managed events during the last year. Robert is a huge proponent of in-person events, and is hoping for their return. He loves the accidental situations which arise when you're in the same space as so many other like-minded people. Perhaps though, there's a place for hybrid events; events in which there's in-person and online happening at the same time? Towards the end we chat about the plethora of mergers and acquisitions which are happening right now, as well as a discussion of Openverse, a search engine for openly licensed media, which was launched with little fanfare recently. Useful links. Openverse Robert's website

Un billete a Chattanooga
Episodio 105: Openverse

Un billete a Chattanooga

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2021 48:24


¿Qué es Openverse y por qué pensamos que va a cambiar la forma de trabajar con imágenes, vídeos y audios en WordPress? El episodio Episodio 105: Openverse es un podcast de Un billete a Chattanooga.

BlogAid Podcast
Tips Tuesday – Find CLS issues, Video SEO Booster Course, Content Silo Workshop

BlogAid Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2021 22:43


Tips this week include: • Content Silo live workshop this week • Video SEO Booster course is in live beta • How-To blocks and card tutorials are underway • What I’ll be checking in the upcoming theme testing case study besides speed • Why not to jump on a theme redesign for speed and Core Web Vitals fixes • Why CLS issues are super hard to find sometimes, and the new methods I’m using • First site owners are moving into the new boutique hosting • A fix for buttons losing alignment since the WP 5.7 update • CC Search is relaunching as OpenVerse by WP with Creative Commons images • New CloudLinux PHP manager is goofing up sites, and the fixes • How First Contentful Paint is handled by different browsers • Google only cares about viewership on Chrome • Yoast SEO plugin had a minor bug • How to easily roll plugins updates back to the previous version • Why we may need to add the Classic Widget plugin after WP 5.8 comes out • Where to get step-by-step WP update instructions for major releases

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)
WordPress Openverse

WordPress Podcast (WPPodcast)

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2021 7:07


Se han planteado dos propuestas muy interesantes para WordPress.org: el directorio de patrones y WordPress Openverse.