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Síguenos en: Nunca es tarde para intentar dejar Chrome, ni para descubrir nuevas redes sociales o mejorar nuestros plugins, optimizar las capturas de pantalla o escaparnos un fin de semana a Lisboa. ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Semana corta de trabajo e intensa en general Semana Nahuai Charla en el Modren Web Event de la UOC. Cosa curiosa con las estadísticas de SSP en las últimas 2 semanas. Descubrimos Diaspora, "A privacy-aware, distributed, open source social network", gracias a una sugerencia a nuestro plugin Simple Social Icons. Actualizando Genesis/Osom Author Pro para dar soporte a los botones de compra. El delicado equilibrio entre seguir dando soporte a sistemas anteriores y añadir nuevas características de WordPress moderno. Contenido Nahuai Aplicar una tasa de impuestos predeterminada a una categoría de producto de WooCommerce Contenido Celi Una valoración del plugin nos vendría de perlas. :) Novedades Ya está disponible también el horario de WordCamp Connect de la WCEU 2024, donde Nahuai liderará una charla sobre sostenibilidad: https://europe.wordcamp.org/2024/wordcamp-connect/ WordCamp Cartagena 7-9 de junio: https://cartagena.wordcamp.org/2024/ Tip de la semana Cambiar el formato por defecto en el que se guardan las capturas de pantalla en MacOS, con una línea de terminal: En Sonoma solo soporta PNG, JPG, HEIF, TIFF u PDF Menciones Carlos nos comparte, en X, un par de posts de su blog para usar cargar los vídeos de YouTube desde el dominio nocookie. Marta y Vicent comparten con nosotros que en WordCamp Oporto vieron a una compañía llama Osom Studio. David Pérez se pasa por los comentarios para aclarar el tema del slug en los plugins. Además, nos informa de que se ha realizado hace poco la posibilidad de que sí se aprueba y todavía no se ha subido ningún archivo, se podrá cambiar el slug.
Devin, Liza, Hacer, and Piermario discuss WordCamp Europe 2024 preparations, diversity initiatives, and the new WordCamp Connect.
Zusammenfassung vom WordCamp Europe, Aussicht auf das WordCamp Deutschland und jede Menge WordPress News.
Michelle Frechette talks with Marieke van de Rakt and Joost de Valk of Emilia Capital about their new company and their plans to invest in sustainable and female-led WordPress companies. They discuss their upcoming participation at WordCamp Europe, where they will be sponsoring and offering investment opportunities to new companies. They also delve into the challenges of running a profitable open-source software company and the importance of discussing business models in open-source software. Their passion for supporting sustainable and diverse businesses and their commitment to promoting gender equality through a year-round training and coaching program for women are inspiring! Top TakeawaysImportance of Fit: Finding a good fit when considering investments is crucial. Consider factors like valuation, adding value to the ecosystem, and the ability to contribute to and improve upon a product or service. The need for alignment between an investor's goals and the potential investment is paramount.Women Empowerment: Empowering women through focusing on personal and organizational change can shift the future. Programs that address both an individual's growth within a company and the organization's commitment to gender equality are needed. A comprehensive approach to empowering women in the workplace is necessary to bring real change.Growth and Excitement: Being passionate about your investments can lead to increased growth. Building on your investments within WordPress enables you to build momentum and enthusiasm to achieve real growth. It can also lead to new opportunities and partnerships.
Topher and Maestro met at WordCamp Buffalo a few weeks previous, and then conncetted again in Hallway Chats to talk about his WCEU talk.
The hot topic this week was diversity. More specifically, how it relates to the upcoming WordCamp Europe speaker lineup.After the event announced its fifth round of speakers, StellarWP's Michelle Frechette took to Twitter with the following observation:“So far only 25% of the speakers announced for #WCEU are women (by name/photo), and only three appear to be non-white. Hoping to see some more inclusion in the next few rounds of announcements.”What followed were some heated comments - including one from event organizer Sjoerd Blom:“Please stop being prejudiced and wait until ALL speakers have been announced. Thanks.”It's worth noting that subsequent announcements have included more women and people of color. However, the tenor of conversation in Frechette's thread has raised eyebrows.To read more about the issues at hand, check out posts from Job Thomas, “Diversity in conference speaker line-up” and MasterWP's Rob Howard, “For WordCamp, the challenge of diversifying tech takes center stage”.Links You Shouldn't MissA new proposal aims to modernize WordCamps. In the near future, the events could be focused on a singular topic and a specific audience. The WP Minute's Eric Karkovack spoke with Angela Jin, WordPress Head of Programs & Contributor Experience, to learn more. They discussed the current state of WordCamps and how these community cornerstones might benefit from a change.This month marks the 20th anniversary of WordPress. As part of the celebration, The WP Minute+ released a panel discussion about the software's biggest moments. Hosted by David Bisset, the panel features Rae Morey, Jeff Chandler, Ken Elliot, and The WP Minute's Eric Karkovack.WordPress 6.2.1 was released on May 16. This version includes 20 bug fixes to WordPress core, 10 for the block editor, and a handful of security patches. And it also introduced an issue that breaks shortcodes used within block theme templates. If this describes your site, think twice before updating. Meanwhile, a workaround has been created and a permanent solution is being discussed.Last week, we reported on a reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability that was recently patched in the Advanced Custom Fields plugin. Sarah Gooding at WP Tavern reported that, within 24 hours of the vulnerability's disclosure, attackers had begun attempts to exploit it. According to Ryan Barnett of Akamai Security Intelligence Group (SIG), malicious actors used code examples shared within the disclosure. It's recommended that users of the plugin update their installs immediately.From the Grab BagNow it's time to take a look at some other interesting topics shared by our contributors.WordPress has accumulated 13 default themes since 2010. To cut down on maintenance requirements, there's a proposal to retire some of the older themes.Cloud service provider WPCS announced that they've secured investment from Emilia Capital. Emilia is owned by Yoast founders Joost de Valk and Marieke van de Rakt.Users of Essential Addons for Elementor should take note of a recently-patched security vulnerability. Sarah Gooding of WP Tavern reports that the unauthenticated privilege escalation vulnerability was rated as critical, and was patched in version 5.7.2 of the plugin.Speaking of security - ever wonder what it's like to work in the field? Check out an interview with Alexander Concha, an Application Security Engineer at Automattic.The Kirki Customizer Framework plugin has found a new home. Founder David Vongries previously announced that he was sunsetting the product and looking to sell. WordPress development firm Themeum has acquired the plugin and plans to keep it in active development.Gravity Forms has launched a new podcast called “Breakdown”. The show explores different ways to use the popular plugin and will feature special guests. And it's hosted by our very own Matt Medeiros.WordPress competitor Wix now offers support for “headless” website configurations. The service takes advantage of the growing popularity of headless installs, with the ability to manage content from the Wix site builder.There's a difference between branding and marketing. Hazel Quimpo and Michelle Frechette discussed the topic on a recent episode of the Audacity Marketing podcast.Curious about the benefits of a 4-day workweek? Social media toolkit provider Buffer have released data regarding their three-year journey using the arrangement.New Members This WeekAdam Weeks ★ Support this podcast ★
The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 16th January 2023.
The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 16th January 2023.
The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 7th November 2022.
The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 7th November 2022.
David and Olivia Bisset sat down for a chat with Matt Mullenweg about open source, Tumblr, and how Matt deals with negativity. Matt has three roles today: CEO of Tumblr, CEO of Automattic, and project lead for the next release of WordPress. He shares what went wrong with post formats and what he would love to acquire next if he could. The answer may (or may not) surprise you! This interview was recorded shortly before WordCamp Europe 2022.
We myself and Andrew Palmer have a discussion on WCEU (WordCamp Europe 2022)which has been slightly criticized for not being diverse enough connected to the speaker list and also how it dealt with Covid-19 and mask requirements. To be honest, personally, I thought both criticism points were petty and unfair and I thought the organizers of WCEU did an amazing job pulling off a great event in semi-difficult times.Then we discuss where is WordPress in the second half of 2022 which I can't believe while has the first half gone?
We have switched over to Slack from Discord. News There has been a lot of feedback for full site editing in the latest release of WordPress. The team over on make.wordpress.org is looking for people to sign up for usability testing by June 24th. This outreach program is going to try something new and pair up members of the program with community designers. Once paired, they will then find time between June 20th and July 1st to record a 15-minute call on Zoom going through one of two tasks: Creating & applying a new header, and using and customizing patterns. WordPress.org is now strongly recommending that theme authors switch to local hosted webfonts. Sarah Gooding writes over on WPTavern that a recent German court case fined a website using Google-hosted webfonts. In order to comply with GDPR - Europe's General Data Protection Regulation - WordPress themes should switch to locally hosted webfonts. Are you still recovering from WCEU? There are two reviews from media supporters that you may want to check out. Bob Dunn and Matt Medeiros recorded their experiences. And there are nearly 3000 event photos. If you would like to see those you can view the photo album from WCEU on Flickr. Andrew Palmer reviews his WCEU experience right here on the WP Minute. Nathan Wrigley interviews Matt Mullenweg on the Jukebox podcast hosted at the WPTavern. Mullenweg shares his reflections on WordPress and the changes to come in the future. WooCommerce: WooCommerce 6.6 was released and you can find the complete changelog over on the WooCommerce site for the recent changes. From Our Contributors and Producers Eric Karkovack writes about the CMS landscape (including WordPress) on the latest at the WP Minute. Eric makes a good argument about why a freelancer would not choose WordPress for building a website. What's with the WordPress vibe? Changes and Acquisitions seem to be published weekly now. Acquisitions in #WordPress have created some concern among smaller businesses and entrepreneurs as we compete with bigger companies with much larger budgets. Mark Zahra has a little survey on Twitter asking if you had to double down on one area in the next 6 months with the goal of generating growth, what would it be? There were several layoffs reported lately from Elementor and Envato. James Giroux tweeted about the status of @envato and @elemntor announcing significant redundancies in the last week. You can help those affected by: 1. Celebrating wins publicly and calling out individuals by name 2. Adding to their LinkedIn profiles 3. Introducing them to your network Next Up: Simplified Business Minute by Sam Muñoz The Case for Not Automating Client Interac
On the podcast today we have Milan Ivanovic. Milan is a WordPress Developer at Valet.io, and is a WordCamp volunteer, speaker, and organizer. He's the WordPress.org global translation editor, WordPress Serbia lead, and is now part of the WordCamp Europe alumni. As if that weren't enough, Milan is one of the lecturers of the WordPress Academy in Serbia, where he has given talks and WordPress Workshops. He's also a member of the Theme Review and Community Get Involved Teams. It's pretty clear to see that WordPress and WordPress events play a major role in Milan's life, and that's what this podcast is about. We talk about the importance of the WordPress community as a whole, as well as exploring what the situation is like in Milan's home country of Serbia. We also get into the subject of diversity and how Europe as a continent might face diversity challenges which differ from other parts of the world.
On the podcast today we have Milan Ivanovic. Milan is a WordPress Developer at Valet.io, and is a WordCamp volunteer, speaker, and organizer. He's the WordPress.org global translation editor, WordPress Serbia lead, and is now part of the WordCamp Europe alumni. As if that weren't enough, Milan is one of the lecturers of the WordPress Academy in Serbia, where he has given talks and WordPress Workshops. He's also a member of the Theme Review and Community Get Involved Teams. It's pretty clear to see that WordPress and WordPress events play a major role in Milan's life, and that's what this podcast is about. We're drilling down on why the community which surrounds WordPress is a key part in the success of the whole project. The recent hiatus of in-person events has meant that all the events moved online. Whilst this was a good stop gap, Milan, as you will hear, is pleased that real world events are back. We talk about the importance of the WordPress community as a whole, as well as exploring what the situation is like in Milan's home country of Serbia. We discuss how Milan got started as a community member and the different roles that events like WordCamps can offer people wishing to dip their toes in the community waters. We also get into the subject of diversity and how Europe as a continent might face diversity challenges which differ from other parts of the world. Milan is an enthusiastic speaker and I'm sure that you'll get a fresh perspective from listening to the podcast.
In this episode, Andrew Palmer of Bertha.ai reflects on his time at WordCamp Europe. If you were stuck at home to watch from afar like me, your FOMO was probably running at 110%. Unlike Andrew, I missed out on the awesome talks, after parties, and the ever important hallway track. Missing friends and colleagues in one of the most beautiful places in the world! I'm happy to see it was a successful event. If you had a great time, or appreciate their hard work, say thanks to the WCEU Organizing Team.
Strattic was acquired by Elementor. Miriam Schwab, co-founder of Strattic writes: “Life is interesting – sometimes outcomes are obvious, and sometimes what ends up happening kind of blows our minds. When we set out to build Strattic, we expected to follow the usual path: raise Pre-Seed, Seed, A rounds etc. An exit was always on the table, but who knows when that would be or how that would look? It was hard to imagine.”Miriam Schwab Well, imagine no more as her team brings Jamstack to Elementor. A move that should add a lot of value and expertise to the cloud offering of Elementor. Stay subscribed to hear an interview with Miriam on this podcast. Julien Melissas tweeted that his company Craftpeak was acquired. Craftpeak is complete with web solutions for craft breweries. Good news! If you've been struggling with FSE, WordPress 6.1 is set to improve that experience, writes Sarah Gooding on the Tavern. See the roadmap for 6.1 and learn what's ahead…all the way to 2025?! Brian Coords continues to challenge the WordPress status quo over on MasterWP in two featured posts today. First, When the Cathedral Owns the Bazaar, a fresh take on the age-old dilemma: Automattic, a WordPress agency, and an open source ideology walk into a bar. Capping off his second post right here on The WP Minute, where he asks Where will the WordPress middle class go? Rebooting a concept that I wrote about a while back about the blue collar digital worker. Matt Cromwell and Lesley Sim have officially announced Glam That Plugin! Check out the announcement YouTube video where Lesley looks great and Matt…well he's Matt. The grab bag is back! And it's filled with threads! Kim Coleman co-founder of Paid Memberships Pro has an interesting thread on taking a product focus sabbatical. Matias Ventura added more commentary to the WCEU fireside chat with Mullenweg and Josepha Haden Chomposy. He also extended these thoughts around the admin experience in a Make WordPress post. Alan Sschlesser urges that theme.json is not the replacement we're hoping for in WordPress themes. Phil Crumm chops the head off of headless WordPress solutions. Stating that in terms of headless, “it's (WordPress) falling short.” Thanks to all of the members who shared these links today: Eric KarkovackDaniel SchutzsmithBirgit Pauli-HaackRaquel Landefeld
This week I share some WCEU attendee experiences. [powerpress]
WordPress Executive Director Josepha Haden Chomphosy covers some important questions from WordCamp Europe on this special episode of the WordPress Briefing podcast.
On the podcast today we have Remkus de Vries, and he's kicking off what might be described as a mini series on the Jukebox podcast. Last week almost 3,000 WordPressers from all over the world gathered together in Porto, Portugal for the first in-person WordCamp Europe since 2019. Expectations were high, and the event did not disappoint. It really was excellent. Remkus is one of the founders of WordCamp Europe, just over 10 years ago. I wanted to get him on the podcast to talk about how the community's largest WordCamp got started. I also wanted to find out how the current event compares in terms of size and organisation. What's changed over the years? We talk about the importance of events like WordCamps for the community, and how over the last few years the lack of in-person events altered the community.
The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 30th May 2022.
On the podcast today we have Remkus de Vries. Remkus is kicking off what might be described as a mini series on the Jukebox podcast. Last week almost 3,000 WordPressers from all over the world gathered together in Porto, Portugal for the first in-person WordCamp Europe since 2019. Expectations were high, and the event did not disappoint. It really was excellent. I went along with some recording equipment and tried to find a quiet spot. I sat down with some of the speakers, organisers and attendees to talk about all manner of subjects, and that's what this mini series is all about. Over the next fews months, I'll be releasing those conversations as Jukebox podcast episodes. Usually, when we record the podcast, there's typically not a lot of background noise, but that's not always the case with these interviews. We were competing against crowds and air-conditioning fans. Whilst the podcasts are certainly more than listenable, I hope that you understand that the vagaries of the real world were at play. Okay, so back to Remkus. Remkus is one of the founders of WordCamp Europe, just over 10 years ago. I wanted to get him on the podcast to talk about how the community's largest WordCamp got started. I also wanted to find out how the current event compares in terms of size and organisation. What's changed over the years? We talk about the importance of events like WordCamps for the community, and how over the last few years the lack of in-person events altered the community. Remkus is a colourful character and full of interesting insights, which are always worth listening to.
The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 30th May 2022.
News WordPress turned 19 this year on May 27th. Sarah Gooding over at WPTavern wrote an article covering the beginning when Matt Mullenweg partnered with Mike Little and released the first version of WordPress based on the b2/cafelog software. The highlight of this year's anniversary celebration was on the wp19.day website which has video blogs from people all over the WordPress community about how WordPress has changed their lives and how much the community has played a part in its growth. Is WordPress getting more difficult? Lesley Sim has many responses over on her Twitter thread. It is weird that many responses do not include WooCommerce - which has a lot of catching up to do. Jetpack announced that it's breaking up…it's modules, anyway. You can now install the most popular Jetpack modules like Backup, Protect, Boost, Social, Search, and CRM. WooCommerce The first release candidate for WooCommerce 6.6 is now available and currently on track for the planned release date of June 14, 2022. If you would like to check out the changes and test the latest go ahead and download the release from wordpress.org. Events WordCamp EU officially starts this week, June 2 - 4. There are many informal updates occurring on Twitter right now. The WPMinute is donating $5 for every selfie with Matt Cromwell (up to $100) with @learnwithmattc. You can share on this thread at #WCEU to @aBigOrangeHeart. From Our Contributors and Producers Last week the WPMinute reported that the new WordPress Starter plan is available for just $5/month on WordPress.com. This interview with a few questions to Dave Martin, CEO of Automattic, covered the refactoring and pricing of the new WordPress.com. Go check out the interview and provide your feedback on Twitter. If you've been using InstaWP to launch sandbox WordPress websites, things are about to heat up for that platform led by Vikas Singhal. In an exclusive interview with WPMinute producer, Daniel Schutzsmith and Vikas shares how he landed a seed funding round from Automattic and how he plans on using the funding for his company. Are you looking for a WordPress database management plugin or maybe a way to just see what's in your database? Delicious Brains launched the SQL buddy plugin and it is available in the repository. If you are currently using phpMyAdmin and looking for a lightweight plugin, it may be worth checking out this plugin for database management. Oxygen 4.0 was released with many fundamental changes to the builder. The shortcodes are now converted to json. You can check out the latest update on their YouTube video. Joost de Valk shared this Tweet about a potential new search engine from Apple. @Scobleizer says Apple will introduce a new search engine at WWDC. Joost noticed that there has been increased crawling with applebot over the last few months and it will be interest
The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 31st May 2022.
The WordPress news from the last week which commenced Monday 31st May 2022.
“We are going to have two panels - one on acquisitions and another one about the community."— Sabrina ZeidanDavid sits down with Sabrina Zeidan (WCEU Content Team) and Evangelia Pappa (WCEU Public Relations Team) for a preview of the upcoming WordCamp Europe 2022 in Porto, Portugal. Sabrina and Evangelia briefly talk about the conference's COVID safety measures and the overall schedule and theme of WCEU. They offer some tips for things to do while you're attending, and if you're tuning in remotely, there's a surprise waiting for you too. This is the perfect travel episode for anyone en route to WCEU.Why This Matters: WordCamp Europe is one of the first big in-person WordCamp and WordPress events to resume, post-pandemic.Every week Post Status Excerpt will bring you important news and insights from guests working in the WordPress space.
WCEU is happening in Porto, Portugal. Find Do the Woo there and join us in a podcast or let's just have a conversation.
Takis Bouyouris and Taeke Reijenga, part of the organizing team for WordCamp Europe, joins us in a conversation all about WCEU.
This week's WordPress news for the week commencing Monday 11th April 2022.
This week's WordPress news for the week commencing Monday 11th April 2022.
This week's WordPress news for the week commencing Monday 21st March 2022.
This week's WordPress news for the week commencing Monday 21st March 2022.
This week's WordPress news for the week commencing Monday 31st January 2022
This week's WordPress news for the week commencing Monday 31st January 2022
This week's WordPress news for the week commencing Monday 25th October 2021
This week's WordPress news for the week commencing 31st May 2021
This week's WordPress news - Covering The Week Commencing 24th May 2021
This week's WordPress news - Covering The Week Commencing 22nd March 2021
Vi samler op hvor vi slap – 24. December 2019. Vi kigger hvad der skete i 2020 og WP Podcastens ufrivillige pause.2020 sluttede af med WordPress 5.6 Simone, som ud over et 2021 tema også bød på Auto Updates for tema og plugins, ny jquery – Yan fortæller om et plugin Enable jQuery Migrate Helper som kan hjælpe dig med overgangen til WordPress 5.6 Vi vender for og imod auto updates, og selvfølgelig endnu engang hvordan man kan og bør håndtere driften og opdatering af ens WordPress website. 2020 blev også året hvor vi for første gang IKKE kom til WordCamp Europe – som skulle have været i Portugal. WCEU blev lavet som virtuel event – vi havde begge billetter men deltog ikke – og hvorfor så ikke lige det kan man spørge? 2021 bliver året hvor Gutenberg kommer til at skubbe den gamle TinyMCE editor helt ud. Vi snakker om konsekvenserne for brugerne, for builders og om Gutenbergs fremtid, som også byder på en Full Site Editor som OGSÅ er spået til at lande i 2021. Endnu engang kan vi ikke lade være med at komme rundt om hastighed og optimering. Yan nørder CDN lækkerier og vi taler om Googels nye måde at opgøre hastighed på. WordPress verdensherredømme som med er langt over 30% af CMS markedet, må siges at være bastandt vendes ift. TikTok og den generation som om få år overtager vores jobs… de er IKKE synderligt repræsenteret i blandt WordPress entusiaster – endnu. Spørgsmåler er om Gutenberg og Full Site Editor er friskt nok til at kunne beholde føringen… På falde rebet vender vi WordPress.com – som jo er Automattic’s forretningsdel af WordPress, og deres nyeste produkt, som går direkte efter SMV markedet med et managed og custom kodet website af Automattic folk FRA 4.900USD (ca. 30.000dkk). Hvor stiller det de mange WordPress kodere og byggere i Danmark? Til sidst et opråb til vores – forhåbentlig tilbageværende lyttere: Lad os hører fra den danske WP scene. Hvad bygger i, og hvor ligger fokus på WordPress i 2021 for jer ? Skriv til hej@wppodcasten.dk Tak fordi du stadig lytter med
We all know that the WordCamps in 2020 got cancelled. This was a good idea because saving lives comes before attending online events, but I thought that it might be a good idea to get someone on the WP Builds podcast to have a chat with us about WordCamps nonetheless. Why, you might ask? Well, can you imagine what it would be like to be a part of a team who had worked extremely hard to get an event like WordCamp Asia, or WordCamp Europe up and running, only to have to cancel it with just a few days and weeks to go? I could not imagine that, and so I talked to someone who could. Someone who has firsthand experience working on a WordCamp and then having to pivot it into an online event. So find out what's involved in setting up a WordCamp on the podcast today...
La semana pasada celebramos la WordCamp Europe online. Y como es tradición, traemos la reseña del evento desde nuestra experiencia. La WordCamp Europe se iba a celebrar este año en Oporto y se tuvo que cancelar por las razones que todos conocemos. A pesar de ello, se re-formuló como un evento online, con muchas similitudes y diferencias de la WC en España. Como siempre es una oportunidad increíble para conocer a profesionales de otras latitudes, que tienen proyectos muy interesantes, tanto en desarrollo, marketing, SEO, etc. Os cuento la experiencia del contributor day, reseña de algunas charlas que pude disfrutar, anécdotas, y mucho más. Dejo como siempre, enlaces, blogs y recomendaciones en las notas del episodio. Visita: https://seoparawp.com/podcast/45. Te puedes suscribir a la lista de mailing para estar atenta/o a las novedades del programa. ¡Larga vida y prosperidad a WordPress! ;-)Canciones: Somewhere In My Mind de Apache Tomcat y Floating In Space de Podington Bear con licencia Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License, al igual que el podcast.
Hoy tenemos un episodio repleto de contenidos. Vas a flipar. Arrancamos haciendo una reviú rápida de WordCamp Europe, #WCEU, lo que más nos gustó y también lo que menos. Le pegamos un repaso al Summit 2020 del podcast de Quédate con el Cambio, #QCEC20. Te contamos lo que le ha pasado a un compañero que […] The post Episodio 55: Reviú de eventos, plugins, fuentes, GSuite para mail y más appeared first on Un billete a Chattanooga.
This weeks WordPress news - Covering The Week Commencing 25th May 2020:
Síguenos en: Hoy no podemos estar más contentos.... ???? ???? estrenamos semana y estrenamos theme en la web, y aprovechamos la ocasión para hablar precisamente de eso, de crear temas para Genesis Framework. Pero antes, como siempre... ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Entretenida con mantenimientos de clientes, códigos maliciosos, problemas con servidores (límite CPU) y cosas varias. Preparando el theme para freelandev. Contenido esther En el blog: ¿Subcontratar o derivar un proyecto? Y en la Zona DPW: Semana Nahuai En la reunión de Genesis Shapers seguimos debatiendo la mejora manera de Genesis para adaptarse el Full Site Editing (FSE). Además, explicaron un poco más en detalle el lanzamiento de Genesis X y Genesis Pro. Consultoría sobre cómo integrar Stripe + Zapier + Factura Directa para un membershipsite. Jugando con bbPress y FacetWP para proyectos e clientes. Contenido Nahuai Ocultar las notificaciones de actualización en WordPress y Genesis Lanzamiento de la newsletter ¿semanal? https://nbadiola.com/newsletter/ Entrevistado en el podcast de un Sinoficiner: https://diegopascucci.com/podcast/ Tema de la semana: El porqué ponerse ahora a crear themes tal y cómo está el tema.El proceso:Diseño Adobe XDCreación de la base: estilos, partes comunes y plantillas habitualesEstilos para plugins (Formularios, WooCommerce…)Bloques: estilos para bloques nativos y atomic blocksPruebas otros navegadores y dispositivosAjustes responsiveConfiguración del one click setupInstalación y creación de la demoPruebas finalesEl futuro Starter themes: Genesis Starter themes Lee Anthony: GitHub - seothemes/genesis-starter-theme: A starter theme for the Genesis Framework with a modern development workflow Bill Erickson: https://github.com/billerickson/ea-genesis-child/ Cooper Dukes (Genesis 3.0 ready): GitHub - cdukes/bones-for-genesis-2-0: A starting point for new Genesis projects. Built for Genesis 3.* and WordPress 5.*+. Novedades Mañana Meetup WP Granollers online hablando de cómo escoger un theme: https://www.meetup.com/es-ES/WordPressGranollers/events/266778677/ Ya podemos cambiar la versión de PHP en Local. ????????: https://localwp.com/community/t/local-5-4-1/19227 Aumento de un 50% en búsquedas relacionadas con WordPress Ya tenemos programa para la WCEU 2020 con 3 ponentes españoles -> Luis Herranz, Nestor Angulo y Ruth Raventós, Amit Tip de la semana Menciones Cachondeo con los Chatanoogos sobre hacer un crosspodcasting al límite, por sugerencia de Josué. Grabriel se pasa por los comentarios a decir que no conocía las WordCamps pero que le encantó la WCES 2020. Y hasta aquí el episodio de hoy... la próxima semana volveremos con una gran noticia que hemos estado esperando a confirmarla para poder compartirla con vosotros. ???? ????
This weeks WordPress news - Covering The Week Commencing 4th May 2020
This weeks WordPress news - Covering The Week Commencing 6th April 2020
El programa de hoy viene cargadito de temas, mucho WordPress, mucha WordCamp, una noticia bomba y un taller de diseño que va a dar mucho que hablar. Cada vez hay más WordCamps en España y cada vez son mejores. La próxima, WCChiclana 2020, tiene carisma para dar y regalar y allí estará Ana presentando taller, […] The post Episodio 37: De WCEU 2020 y patrones de diseño appeared first on Un billete a Chattanooga.
Síguenos en: ¡Muy buenos y fresquitos lunes de enero! ❄️❄️ Aquí estamos una semana más, con sueño y frío pero encantados de compartir este ratito entre nosotros y con vosotros, hablando de web y WordPress, de migraciones, de Stripe y Restrict Content Pro, de snippets y de todas esas cositas que tanto nos gustan y que nos alegran un poco estas semanas algo complicadas. Pero antes... ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Bastante mala..., con imprevistos, problemas, paletas, urgencias… y un poco de todo... pero malo. ????????♀️ Contenido esther En el blog un post sobre nth-child de CSS y una novedad con el [Front] Snippet del día: Y en la Zona DPW un módulo explicando en detalle la migración de la academia que comentamos también en este episodio. Semana Nahuai Renovación de la home de un par de clientes. Movidas con RCP y Stripe. Terminando de hacer balance económico del 2019.., pero con calma, como comenta con Nuria Hidalgo: Contenido Nahuai Introducir texto animado en WordPress (Aplicado por Jordi Garcia Codina. :D) ???????????????? ???? ¡444 tutoriales! ???? Tema de la semana: Hoy hablamos de un tema, que si tenéis o en algún momento habéis tenido más de un proyecto en marcha, seguro que os habéis planteado... ¿juntos? ¿revueltos? o ¿cada uno en su casa? Sin duda dependerá del proyecto y las circunstancias de cada caso, pero en el episodio de hoy comentamos nuestra experiencia y lo que consideramos que se ha de tener en cuenta para decidir algo así: Estrategia de negocio (marca personal / producto…)Estructura de la informaciónSEOUsabilidad (que el usuario pueda navegar de forma más sencilla) Pero ojo, que los proyectos evolucionan y las decisiones no son de por vida... con el tiempo podemos valorar si vale la pena juntar o separar proyectos... y ese ha sido el caso de la Zona DPW que comentamos también hoy como se ha separado de la web principal esthersola.com Novedades Divi crea un bloque llamado «Divi layout» que te permite usar el builder dentro del editor de bloques. (Page Builder de Site Origin lo había hecho hace 9 meses.) Tip de la semana Solucionar el error al actualizar la tarjeta de crédito en RCP: para solucionarlo puedes ir a la ficha de su suscripción y cambiar «Método de pago» de «Pago manual» a «Stripe». No sabemos porqué en algunos casos aparece cambiado el método de pago y eso impide que el suscriptor puede actualizar los datos... si descubrimos algo más sobre este tema, os informaremos! Menciones ???? David Viña nos recomienda en TW a raíz del nacimiento de un podcast en gallego y Ana nos felicita por la charla enviada a la WCEU y por los plugins. ???? También hacemos un pequeño repaso a las WordCamps de este año, con la chuleta de Javier Casares: https://wpcalendar.io/es/wordcamp/ Y comentamos la próxima Meetup de Terrassa: https://www.meetup.com/es-ES/Terrassa-WordPress-Meetup/events/266578727/ Y por hoy ¡eso es todo! Encantados como siempre de compartir nuestro lunes, y deseando que lo disfrutéis. La próxima semana... ¡más y mejor!
Síguenos en: ¡Buenos días y Feliz Año a todos! Empezamos enero volviendo a temas de desarrollo después de un par de semanas de temas más ligeros (¡aunque no menos importantes!). Hoy queremos compartir cuáles son aquellos plugins que como desarrolladores consideramos que vale la pena invertir en ellos, ya sea para proyectos propios como para nuestros clientes. Pero antes, como siempre... ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Entretenida ultimando los cambios para la nueva web de la Zona DPW y el rediseño de la principal: www.zonadpw.com Contenido esther Actualización de un artículo dedicado a ocultar o desactivar el botón de 'añadir al carrito' en WooCommerce. Semana Nahuai También muy tranquila, con una consultoría web y enviando en el último momento la propuesta para la charla en la WCEU. Contenido Nahuai Mostrar solo entradas «padre» en la página de archivos de un Custom Post Type: Tema de la semana: Hay una serie de plugins, independientemente de los más utilizados o imprescindibles, que aún siendo de pago valen la pena cuando desarrollas o mantienes páginas web en WordPress para clientes. En este episodio comentamos los que nosotros utilizamos y recomendamos: Genéricos de mantenimiento y desarrollo: BackupbuddyUpdraftPlusIthemes SecurityWPRocketACF ProWPMLAll in one migrationDuplicator ProGravity FormsSearchWPWP All export / importFacetWPWP/LR Sync Membresías / e-commerce EDDRestrict Content ProWPCompleteWooCommerce Suscriptions WooCommerce Memberships Tip de la semana Librería de bloques para compartir: ShareABlock. Menciones Boqui nos alegra el fin de año en iVoox -> "Me encanta pasar el último día del año con vosotros. Felicidades por el programa. ¡Sois geniales!" ???? ???? Ricardo Vilar nos recomienda en TW junto a mucha gente maja ???????? ???????? y nuestros queridos chatanoogos mencionan la colisión cósmica, los podcasts hermanos. ???????? También comentamos las 20 valoraciones de 5 estrellas en iTunes ???? y las reseñas que nos habéis ido dejando. ¡Y hasta aquí el episodio de hoy! Un placer como siempre pasar este ratito compartiendo nuestro día a día con vosotros, y la próxima semana... ¡más!
Síguenos en: ????¡Muy buenos días y bienvenidos de nuevo a Freelandev!???? Hoy aprovechamos el kit-kat entre Navidad y Año Nuevo para pasar un lunes más grabando y compartiendo nuestras cosas, hoy con un tema algo más ligero, básicamente porque estamos en Modo Navideño On, y no apetece ponerse técnico... Antes de nada, como siempre... ¿Qué tal la semana? Semana esther Muy tranquila, siguiendo con los mantenimientos y dedicando madrugones a la renovación de la web y la Zona DPW, pero sin proyectos de clientes ni urgencias... y, sobretodo, disfrutando de la família y los niños ???????????????????????? Contenido esther Estas semanitas de Navidad estoy dedicando tiempo a revisar y mejorar algunos contenidos en lugar de publicar de nuevos, y especialmente a planificar los cursos y posts de los próximos meses. Semana Nahuai Tranquila, mantenimiendo, enviando facturas… Salió el podcast donde me entrevistó Nuria Hidalgo en que hablamos de la relación del dinero: Contenido Nahuai Cuatro tutoriales nuevos en Código Genesis, entre ellos: Conseguir que el contenido ocupe el ancho completo en Academy Pro. Tema de la semana: Hoy hablamos de la importancia de sentirse apoyado cuando emprendes, por tu pareja, família y amigos y cómo ha sido este apoyo en nuestro caso, especialmente cuando dimos el paso a autónomos. También divagamos un poco sobre sentirse realizado en el trabajo, que no significa que sea todo maravilloso siempre y que hay cosas que es inevitable que no nos guste hacer y como lidiamos con ello. Tip de la semana Plugin para saber en qué páginas/entradas usas cada bloque: Menciones Pablo Moratinos menciona el taller de Nahuai en Samana WP en Chatanooga y Twitter, Ciudadano B nos agradece la mención, anima a Nahuai a enviar charla a WCEU 2020 y empieza a reclamar charlas para la PonteWordCamp 2020 ???? ????????♀️ David Viña y Dani Primo dejan en los comentarios sus propósitos ???????? y David se pasa a saludar y desearnos felices fiestas ???????????????? Y hasta aquí el episodio de hoy... algo light y azucarado, pero ya es lo que toca en estas fechas, ¿no? Feliz Año Nuevo a todos!! ???? A por el 20 20!! ???? ????
Immer wieder die Technik. Eigentlich hatten wir alles für das Streaming vorbereitet, doch dann kommt der Technikteufel. Deshalb diese Woche dann nochmal eine Audio-Version des Podcasts. Dieses mal mit dabei sind Rene Reimann, Robert Windisch und Sven Wagener. Mit im Gepäck ist wieder das Neueste aus der WordPress-Welt.
Carole Olinger is what I call a real go-getter. This year she joined WP&UP to be the Crew Chief for headto.org, a huge undertaking where she and anyone else who wants to join will bicycle from Germany to Portugal for #WCEU 2020! Spending time with Carole was inspirational. I know you'll agree!
In this episode of PressThis, we do our monthly "Word Around the Campfire" episode where we review news and updates from the WordPress community.For our July 2019 update we cover updates from WCEU which was held in Berlin as well as huge changes happening in the WordPress ecosystem, like WP Engine's acquistion of Flywheel and much more.If you're looking to keep up with the latest news in WordPress, listen to this episode of PressThis now!
In this episode of PressThis, we do our monthly "Word Around the Campfire" episode where we review news and updates from the WordPress community.For our July 2019 update we cover updates from WCEU which was held in Berlin as well as huge changes happening in the WordPress ecosystem, like WP Engine's acquistion of Flywheel and much more.If you're looking to keep up with the latest news in WordPress, listen to this episode of PressThis now!
In this episode, Malcolm Peralty and I are joined by Dan Maby, Founder of WP&UP. […]
Demo and Jesse recap WordCamp Europe, and interview members of the community on a cassette tape recorder, in honor of the 80's theme at the afterparty.
La WordCamp Europe es el evento más importante de WordPress en el viejo continente, que reúne gente de todo el mundo. Una verdadera celebración anual, de uno de los proyectos open source más grandes del mundo. Es mucho más que un congreso, y no deja indiferente a nadie. Tuve el inmenso placer de poder asistir por primera vez y te hago mi reseña. Este 2019 se celebró en Berlín, Alemania y reunió a casi 3.000 personas. ¿Quieres todos los recursos mencionados? Te dejo muchísimas fotos y enlaces. Visita: https://seoparawp.com/podcast/episodio-23-wceu/¡Larga vida y prosperidad a WordPress! ;-)
For the audiophiles in the audience, check out the all-analog version of our Special Edition from WCEU
El evento más grande de WordPress de toda la historia se ha celebrado en Berlín del 20 al 22 de junio: WordCamp Europe 2019 #WCEU. En él han participado decenas de españoles como organizadores, voluntarios, asistentes y ponentes. En el programa de hoy tenemos el placer de contar con los dos ponentes, que representaron a […] The post Episodio 6: De WordCamp Europe con Fernando Tellado appeared first on Un billete a Chattanooga.
This week, we're at WordCamp Europe in Berlin, Germany and there is a lot of WordPress and security news to cover. We talk about the recent outage with WordPress VIP Go, what's new in WordPress version 5.2.2, vulnerabilities in two of Facebook's WordPress plugins, a Google Chrome extension for reporting bad URLs and a Chrome extension found to hijack search results. We talk about the importance and future of Troy Hunt's "Have I Been Pwned" project as he preps it for sale, a Firefox 0Day exploited in the wild, and two more American municipalities affected by malware. Evite disclosed a recent breach, Telegram gets DDoSed, a vulnerability found in Evernote's Web Clipper and Netflix's discovery of multiple Linux and FreeBSD vulnerabilities. Approximate timestamps in case you want to jump around: 1:42 WordPress VIP Go outage 3:29 Wordpress 5.2.2 Update 4:28 Security implications of WordPress multisite 8:34 Self-promoting security troll strikes again 12:06 Chrome Suspicious URL Extension 13:36 Should Google be monetizing GSB data? 18:31 Malicious "YouTube Queue" chrome extension 21:25 Have I Been Pwned for sale 28:46 Firefox 0-day 30:00 Ransomware hits Philly 34:00 House lawmakers demand end to warrantless surveillance 37:20 Evite data breach 39:32 Telegram servers DDoSed 43:19 Evernote XSS flaw 46:22 Linux and FreeBSD vulns
In this episode, Malcom Peralty and I discuss what’s new in WordPress 5.2.2, XML Sitemaps […]
In this episode, John James Jacoby and I discuss an article published by Vox on […]
This week I was excited to speak with Christie Chirinos from CalderaWP. I had followed her WordCamp EU presentation on the topic of financial forecasting back in June of 2018 and it intrigued me. Christie has an M.B.A. in Management Information Systems from Florida State University and has been involved in the WordPress space for a few years now, currently being a partner in the CalderaWP team that is well-known for the Caldera Forms plugin. She enjoys sharing the knowledge she has gathered over the years with others in the WordPress community through talks at WordCamps and shows like this one. In the episode, Christie took some time out of her busy schedule to continue discussing financial forecasting, business strategies and business administration. We discuss everything from what financial forecasting is to what business strategies are and how you should plan out your future targets. We also delve into possible ways of learning more about how to run your business without having to necessarily get a degree or go to business school, plus a few other interesting tips and discussions that you won't want to miss! Links: Twitter: @cicichirinos Website: christiechirinos.com LinkedIn: Christie Chirinos (check out the delightful brief intro :) ) WordPress.tv: Financial Forecasting for WordPress Businesses (WordCamp US) A very similar talk to the one given at WCEU, for which the video is not yet available. Plugin: Caldera Forms
Every Friday at 8:30am PST we record a live round-table show all about latest WordPress news stores of the week plus we discuss general stories connected to the Web and technology in general. This weeks Stories 1 - WP Rig – A WordPress Starter Theme and Build Process in One https://wptavern.com/wp-rig-a-wordpress-starter-theme-and-build-process-in-one 2 - State Sales Tax: Which States Are Most Affected By The Supreme Court Online Retail Ruling? https://www.forbes.com/sites/advisor/2018/06/21/state-sales-tax-which-states-are-most-affected-by-the-supreme-court-online-retail-ruling/ 3 - Gutenberg Team Panel Talks Release Timeline, Theme Building, and Customization at WCEU https://wptavern.com/gutenberg-team-panel-talks-release-timeline-theme-building-and-customization-at-wceu 4 - 4 Ways to Improve Your Site’s Content https://www.webdesignerdepot.com/2018/06/4-ways-to-improve-your-sites-content/ 5 - WordPress Security As A Process https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2018/06/wordpress-security-as-a-process/ 6 - Young people still love Twitter — as screenshots on Instagram
If you missed WordCamp Europe 2018 or where there and just didn't see all the things, don't miss this WCEU recap episode of PressThis. We'll be discussing important updates to WordPress Core, news events, and a ton of interesting insights from across WCEU. The WP Engine and Torque teams where out in full force at WCEU, so don't miss the chance to benefit from thier feet on the ground. Listen now!
If you missed WordCamp Europe 2018 or where there and just didn't see all the things, don't miss this WCEU recap episode of PressThis. We'll be discussing important updates to WordPress Core, news events, and a ton of interesting insights from across WCEU. The WP Engine and Torque teams where out in full force at WCEU, so don't miss the chance to benefit from thier feet on the ground. Listen now!
This weeks WordPress news – Covering The Week Commencing 18th June 2018: Matt Mullenweg Unveils Gutenberg Roadmap at WCEU, WordPress Agencies and Product Developers Sprint to PrepareLast week I mentioned the fact that Matt Mullenweg had spoken about Gutenberg at WCEU. What I forgot to mention was the timeline that he spelled out. I'm not […]
This weeks WordPress news – Covering The Week Commencing 18th June 2018: Matt Mullenweg Unveils Gutenberg Roadmap at WCEU, WordPress Agencies and Product Developers Sprint to PrepareLast week I mentioned the fact that Matt Mullenweg had spoken about Gutenberg at WCEU. What I forgot to mention was the timeline that he spelled out. I'm not […]
Russ and Jason morning show https://www.wpwatercooler.com/video/ep276-wpwatercooler-6-8-2018-2/WordCamp OC Recap https://www.wpwatercooler.com/video/ep277-wordcamp-orange-county-2018-recap/WPblab - Planning Maintaining a Flexible Content Calendar w/ Laura Coronado https://www.wpwatercooler.com/video/wpblab-ep104-planning-maintaining-a-flexible-content-calendar-w-laura-coronado/Sé gets confusedGutenberg and how it will impact them and how folks aren’t taking it seriously.GDPR and the recent episodes we’ve talked about itSé thinks the community haven’t addressed or correctly for the “normals” to know about itCosper chimes in that he thinks we’ve done well at meet ups discussing this and that the REST API and MP6 styles for the dashboardWere not sure people attending meetups are listening when we talk about Gutenberg.We transition to taking about making sure our attendees to our meetups are kept up to date about about the changes in WordPressDiscussing the impact and the lack of caring and engagement regarding Gutenberg concerns us. This is problematic because not know about these changes coming up can be big for many people using WordPress regardless if they are developers or not.Cosper talks about the monolith in 2001 and they don’t know what it is but it exists. They study it and they finally hit it and all hell breaks loose and they don’t understand it. He thinks it’s good we have a new timeline and that Matt has addressed this at WCEU. Cosper says that it’s on you to learn about this.Jason talk about the Guten-iceberg and how people should see this.Cosper talks about the nag bar on the dashboard and how this helps somewhat to get people to look at the new functionality.Sé brings up the timeline a bit and for ship it when it’s ready. Cosper shares his sign on his wall that’s says “shitty and done is better than 3 months late”Cosper talks about compatibility with other plugins. Jason brings up dealing with old plugins that don’t even know what Gutenberg is.Sé talks about old plugins in the repo and why they are still in there. Cosper brings up that the search results in the repo shows if a plugin is old or not. Se wants them removed.Jason brings up the Gutenberg Compatibility list and tells folks they should look into it https://plugincompat.danielbachhuber.com/Apple cleaned up their App Store using the excuse of 32bit and 64bit applications. https://developer.apple.com/support/app-store-improvements/Sé wants to get Mika on the show to discuss plugins, compatibility and dealing with old plugins in the repo.Jason talks about the ways to filter the plugins based on compatibility with GutenbergSé talks about Woocommerce being listed on this list as not compatible with Gutenberg is concerning to her. https://plugincompat.danielbachhuber.com/#compatibility-results/view-plugin-details/5a95f3dd4915723fa0b27d6f/Sé wants to know why there is an arbitrary date for release on Gutenberg. Cosper provides a solution for larger sites and how security updates are still released for older versions. He talks about the RCs, the Nightly, and the Betas and people should be looking into these for now.Wanna be on this episode or one in the future? https://www.wpwatercooler.com/eventsInterested in getting your product or service in front of our viewers and listeners? Check out how to sponsor an episode of one of our shows. https://www.wpwatercooler.com/sponsor/✩ Twitter - http://twitter.com/wpwatercooler✩ Blog/Website - http://www.wpwatercooler.com✩ Facebook- http://www.facebook.com/wpwatercooler✩ Podcast RSS Feed - http://www.wpwatercooler.com/feed✩ iTunes - wpwatercooler.com/itunes✩ Stitcher - http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/wpwatercooler✩ Soundcloud - https://soundcloud.com/wpwatercooler✩ Google+ - https://www.google.com/+WPwatercoolern See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode of PressThis, we explore updates in the WordPress community around the impact of GDPR, upcoming WCEU, a study of billable rates for WP developers, the new Gutenberg migration guide, and more! Don't miss this chance to catch up on the latest in WordPress news on this episode of PressThis!
In this episode of PressThis, we explore updates in the WordPress community around the impact of GDPR, upcoming WCEU, a study of billable rates for WP developers, the new Gutenberg migration guide, and more! Don't miss this chance to catch up on the latest in WordPress news on this episode of PressThis!
On this episode, Jason Tucker and Bridget Willard get sentimental and invite past guests to jump on and share what they've learned recently in WordPress. We're all life-long learners. Come join in the fun in the chat and see more details in our Facebook Group. 100 Episodes since October 2015!!Bridget WillardJason TuckerBridget: “As we learn and grow and teach, our bio’s change and grow!”Russell AaronHas been on WPblab off & on since the beginning and was on nearly weekly in the beginning when it was more of a Q&A showHis girlfriend was super supportive of his journey in WordPress and let him spend the time he needed coding and ‘leveling up’ his skills. They now have a little boy, which is also a big learning journey for them!Never thought he could work for a company like WebDev Studios but met the right people and answered the right questions and here he is! Over 2 years with them now!If you are ever having errors, you have 3 options – make a backup and try turning things on and off, have a staging site, and reach out to people you are connected to in the community – lean on other people!WordPress is so cool! Put your heart into it and you’re gonna love it! Kevin HoffmanKevin remembers WPblab when it was still on the Blab platform!Blab was an interesting beast, you never knew who would pop in! Bridget: it was like Chatroulette!Had to keynote WordCamp Pittsburgh on 2 days notice, so he covered his WordPress journey, which basically all started with WPblab. Decided to try and run his own blab – talked for 30 minutes and no one showed up! Realized that he wasn’t putting things on record – not writing blog posts or sharing his work. People don’t always operate on your time. I have value to offer but it doesn’t mean the person on the receiving end is ready at that moment. He worked on WordPress for 7 years before he wrote his first blog post! James TryonEasily Amused, Inc and Wapu.usJames has been on & off the show for a long time, helping with show notes too!Bridget: For a long time WPblab was a virtual meetup! It was a great option for people who had meetups far from them.James looks forward to it every week, it makes his Thursday night! Loves the chatting, and hanging out with everyone! Even though he’s across the country, it feels like everyone is together on Thursday nights!Jason: it’s so strange because he’ll see people online and through Blab all the time and then see them in person and it will be like they’ve just seen each other, even though they are on opposite coasts – all thanks to WPblabJames’ word of wisdom – he has been thoroughly enjoying an hour a day of yard work lately! Exercise and fresh air!He really loved WP Watercooler but WPblab feels like home to him. He looks forward to it every Thursday and feels bad when he has to miss it. We all feel like family!Bridget: “It’s so true! If I have a panic attack while I’m at WCEU, will any of my friends be there?” And so many people jumped up to say they would! Roy SivanHad him on several WPblab shows in the past & interviewed him several timesHis favorite memory was getting in a deep conversation with Bridget about open sourceOne thing that impresses Bridget most is that Roy and none of the WP Crowd ever talk down to her about WordPress & her level of knowledge/skills“For every good developer, there is a user to give that developer purpose!”You’re a user and without you, I have no reason to build this thing – but you give us purpose and a reason to create!Bridget: you can have a cognitive dissonance if you aren’t using your product. Even if you knew it once a few years ago, if you haven’t used it since, everything has changed! The whole crewRoy’s shoutout – go over to Matt Cromwell’s twitter to check out a video of trolling BenRoy – he loved how Jason was always doing tech support with Blab!Bridget – you want Jason to be the “guy” – you certainly don’t want it to be me!Bridget – I don’t build websites, hire Roy!Bridget – just wrote her first WordCamp talk on GitHub with Markdown!All – discuss how much (or if any) company logo can appear on WordCamp talk slides and still be acceptable for WordPress.tvBridget – WordPress has taught me how to go to bars – true story LOLBridget – WordPress.TV is the best – free learning! Lynda is great, but WP.tv is freeRussell – when I got to WordCamp, I want to learn, I don’t want to be bored! WordPress.tv – if you ever want to see the energy of the community, that’s the placeRussell & Bridget both dream about their WordCamp talks Tools of the week:James: Google Drive is amazing for working as a team – we can all take notes on the same documents and share the same files. We use it all the time, along with Slack.Russell – WP-CLI (command line interface) – if you don’t know what the command line tool is and how amazing it is, go learn about it – it’s the best tool!Kevin: Look into BEM – Block Element Modifier (CSS naming convention)https://twitter.com/kevinwhoffman/status/987005921510526976Roy: SVG.js – complex animating with SVGs – really great library with lots of cool plugins – wrote a plugin called the Gutenburg Object Plugin. Takes the data and saves it properly in the database as an array instead of in markup format.Bridget: TouchNote – will send postcards of your photos & even canvas prints Also: STEP program with the State Department – connects you to US Embassy and give them your info for when you are traveling overseasJason: Markdown editor: https://macdown.uranusjr.com/ – simplest and free – MacDown. It’s 2 panes, type text on one side, renders Markdown on the other side Roy Question for Bridget – where you used to believe Open Source was not a good thing, how do you feel now? – When you have intellectual property and you give it away for free – it is your choice. The thing that’s great about WordPress, it’s not about planned obsolescence. They don’t create something that will break to create new customers. This is the issue that she has with Gutenberg. WordPress believes that everyone has the right to publish and stands upon the idea that they will never break your site. Gutenberg might break that. What is the best solution for your customer/user?Bridget: The relationships and people are what makes WordPress valuable. WordPress is at a crossroads, do we want to stay with our core beliefs that it’s all about ‘democratizing publishing’ or do we bow to capitalism?I love WordPress, I love the community and I love the WPblab group even more!! ______________Show notes contributed by:Cheryl LaPrade – @yaycherylSherie LaPrade – @heysherie The post WPblab – 100th Episode Mastermind – Lifelong Learning with Our Community appeared first on WPwatercooler. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week on WPblab we speak with Andy Lara on how he build an in-person community online for the Vox Podcast with Mike ErreAndy Lara – Creative Director – VOX CommunityCohost of Vox Podcast – http://www.voxpodcast.com/@andy_lara twitterMike wanted to create a place where he could talk about and say the kinds of things that aren’t as easy when you are bound by the rules of a church so he thought a podcast might be the way Started out first online, but grew into an a communityEvangelism / Doctrine / Theology … conferences, meetups, retreats etc … there is a lot of commonality between how churches function and how the WordPress community functionsIn marketing nowadays, people don’t want the hard sell – the way you evangelize a product or a community is much the samePodcasts are one of the best things out there for transparency / reaching your customers & audience that a lot of small businesses aren’t doing. It’s a very low-budget way to create authenticity.Mike and Andy started a podcast in Mike’s office where they were looking and talking to each other and not at the camera. He moved away and they had to move to talking directly to the camera and it increased the audience exponentially! People want to see faces, they want you to be talking to them!Especially in the tech industry, a lot of people are isolated, working remotely or on their own and are missing out on the human connection which makes it even more important to reach them on a personal levelIf you are just listening to a podcast and not doing something with it, you’re wasting it … you need to use the info, interact, give backStarted a church via the podcast … started with 80 church ‘planters’ and was able to launch with over 300 people because they were already engaged via the podcast. They knew the culture and the DNA before they ever showed up in person.About 50,000 downloads per month for their podcast – people all across the nation tune inThe podcast is largely discussional, two guys hashing out the issues of the dayTheir ability to sit down and do a podcast, helps them to take these big philosophical discussions and make them more accessible and conversational … it’s also a resource that they can point people to in the churchWhen we put our souls into our brands – that has meaning. When we offer up who we are in our podcasts, that has meaning. It’s like when Matt Mullenweg sits down and does his talks at WCEU or WCUS. It puts a human face on what he does.Giving integrity back to the audience – they believe their listeners are actually smart, they keep the podcast real and don’t try to hard to make it perfect and glossyThey built in a hefty feedback model where any member of the team can give feedback to Mike, even though he’s the pastor … everyone has something valuable to offerIn a community, it’s important to create a space where people can feel like they belong – you have to allow people to speak and be heard – when they feel safe and they have trust, they will speak upConversations and relationship are the things that transform us and make us into better and healthier peopleTreat your community volunteers like real people, make them feel that their contribution is meaningfulGive your volunteers roles a real job title to make them feel important. Also limit trials to 6 months to show how people fit. Give them ownership in the process.The post WPblab EP83 – Starting an In-Person Community Online w/ Andy Lara appeared first on WPwatercooler. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Das WordCamp EU 2017 ist zu Ende gegangen und wir wollen uns natürlich darüber unterhalten was in Paris passiert ist. Dazu haben wir Carole Olinger und Alain Schlesser zu Gast. Auch Marc Nilius macht dieses mal nicht nur den Sicherheitspart, sondern erzählt uns dieses mal auch von seinen Erlebnissen auf dem WordCamp Paris. Außerdem gibt es dieses mal wieder News, Termine und Plugin Picks.
This week I answer listener questions Upcoming Events WordCamp Jacksonville – May 20-21 WordCamp Lisboa – May 20-21 WordCamp Kathmandu – May 20 SouthBay WordPress Meetup – May 18 The WordPress Essentials Course – Starts May 24 Segment 1: In the News WordPress 4.8 – June 8th release . Matt Mullenweg announced to speak at WCEU…
This week I answer listener questions Upcoming Events WordCamp Jacksonville – May 20-21 WordCamp Lisboa – May 20-21 WordCamp Kathmandu – May 20 SouthBay WordPress Meetup – May 18 The WordPress Essentials Course – Starts May 24 Segment 1: In the News WordPress 4.8 – June 8th release . Matt Mullenweg announced to speak at WCEU…
This week I review The LearnDash LMS Plugin Upcoming Events No WordCamps next weekend. :( Segment 1: In the News Call for WCEU 2018 host city extended, final batch of tickets released WordCamp San Diego: Multiple rounds of speaker tracks were announced Segment 2: My review on the LearnDash LMS Plugin Segment 3: Tool of the…
This week I review The LearnDash LMS Plugin Upcoming Events No WordCamps next weekend. :( Segment 1: In the News Call for WCEU 2018 host city extended, final batch of tickets released WordCamp San Diego: Multiple rounds of speaker tracks were announced Segment 2: My review on the LearnDash LMS Plugin Segment 3: Tool of the…
In episode 01, we talk to the Web Princess herself, Dee Teal where she gives us a recap of WordCamp Europe and we talk about WP Meetups, and the Community. If you’re interested in being a guest on the show, or have any Aussie based WP news or events that you would like us to […] The post 01 – Dee Teal | WCEU, Meetups, Community appeared first on WP Bosses.
This week I interview first time WordCamper Peter Malick Upcoming Events WordCamp New York July 15- 17 WordCamp Lima – July 16 WordCamp Lehigh Valley, PA – July 16 Segment 1: In the News WPSiteSync version 1.1 released. WordPress 4.6 Beta 2 WCEU – Matt Mullenweg sat down with Brian Krosgaurd for Q/A Segment 2: …
This week I interview first time WordCamper Peter Malick Upcoming Events WordCamp New York July 15- 17 WordCamp Lima – July 16 WordCamp Lehigh Valley, PA – July 16 Segment 1: In the News WPSiteSync version 1.1 released. WordPress 4.6 Beta 2 WCEU – Matt Mullenweg sat down with Brian Krosgaurd for Q/A Segment 2: …