{"id":590,"date":"2012-11-14T18:49:53","date_gmt":"2012-11-14T17:49:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wprealm.com\/?p=590"},"modified":"2012-11-14T18:49:53","modified_gmt":"2012-11-14T17:49:53","slug":"a-tale-of-two-wordpresses-wpcs-pressnomics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/wprealm.local\/a-tale-of-two-wordpresses-wpcs-pressnomics\/","title":{"rendered":"A Tale of Two WordPresses: WPCS & Pressnomics"},"content":{"rendered":"
Over the past few weeks I’ve been exceptionally lucky to have attended two of the most unique WordPress events of this year: the WordPress Community Summit and Pressnomics. I’ve already attended four WordCamps (!!!) in Utrecht, Edinburgh, New York, and Lisbon,<\/a> each of which had its own character and cultural flavour. I tend to go to WordCamps with a few things in mind – hang out with my WordPress friends, meet current clients, pick up new clients, share knowledge, get do a bit of partying. I’m usually successful at all of these things.<\/p>\n WordCamps are usually focused on doing things with WordPress, whether that’s as a user or as a developer. However, in Georgia and Arizona over the past few weeks, I’ve been involved in two quite different faces of WordPress: Community and Commercialisation.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The WordPress Community Summit<\/a> was an invite-only event held in the wedding chapel on Tybee Island, on 29th October 2012. Five of us from WP Realm there – myself, Andrea, Christine, Remkus, and Z\u00e9. While specific issues were addressed, there were some general over-arching questions:<\/p>\n The topics spanned from issues such as how we can increase international participation to how we can move towards WordPress auto-updates. We looked at high-level organisational items such as the transparency of the foundation and the implementation of the GPL, and the creation of new tools like a multi-lingual plugin<\/a>.<\/p>\n While controversy was expected, it never occurred. Instead there was a group of about 130 people who were focused on making WordPress better. I understand that there were people who were put-out that it was an invite-only event but I think that this was part of the event’s strength. Everyone there spoke up and got involved, no one was just along for the ride. It was the mix of people there that made the event so successful, and I think this could have been lost of the event was a free-for-all. What will come of the summit, I hope, are improvements to WordPress that will benefit all of us.<\/p>\n For my own part, I’ll be spending the foreseeable future focusing my WordPress contribution efforts on the Handbooks<\/a>. A lot of discussion at the summit was around making it easier for people to contribute to WordPress. It is not always 100% clear how people can get involved. I hope that by putting attention on this we can make it easier for people to do so. If you’d like to get involved with the handbooks you can check out this post<\/a>.<\/p>\n That was my own experience of the summit, and it was very much informed by the issues that I came with. I wanted to talk about handbooks and documentation and that’s what I did. People who came with different issues had different outcomes, but I’ve no doubt that each individual experience will strengthen WordPress as a whole.<\/p>\nCommunity Summit: Building the WordPress Community<\/h3>\n
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