Introducing our second speakers!

Yesterday we introduced you to our first batch of speakers. Today we’re delighted to bring you the rest of our lineup!

  • Ahmed Khalifa

    Ahmed Khalifa is an experienced freelance WordPress SEO consultant and also runs a deaf awareness business. Since he is also moderately deaf/hard of hearing, combining his professional and personal experiences have allowed him to understand how important it is for everyone to have access to content and how it can benefit the content creators too.

    While most people assume that captions can benefit the d/Deaf and hard of hearing, it can also benefit more people than you think and plays a great part in improving many users’ experience when consuming video content.

    Session

  • Chris Brosnan

    Chris is a self-taught developer with almost ten years of professional experience and several more as a hobbyist tinkerer from a young age. He has a particular interest in PHP development with WordPress and Laravel (as well as other MVC frameworks).

    He has shared his passion for both in different industries including the charity, travel, financial, blockchain and fashion sectors. When not coding, Chris enjoys film, board games, blogging and watching football.

    Session

  • David Artiss

    By day, David Artiss works as a Support Engineer and hiring lead on the WordPress VIP team at Automattic. His nearly thirty years of experience in IT support roles has given him the chance to cultivate the art of truly taking care of people and writing so anyone can understand.

    David has been active in the WordPress community for 12 years, first as a plugin author, then as a speaker and volunteer at various WordCamps, as well as contributing to Core, Support, Documentation, Translations, and WordPress.TV.

    By night, David has performed in 18 musicals and concerts, so is no stranger to the stage. He also writes for the straight-talking technology site The Big Tech Question. He lives in Nottingham, England, with his wife, two daughters, and a room full of Lego.

    Session

  • Jessica Thomas

    Jessica Thomas is a freelance digital marketer who brings her WordPress and SEO skills together to help small businesses and entrepreneurs succeed online. Jessica began her career in the auction industry and now builds websites that reach the top of Google. Jessica is especially known for her SEO services and WordPress websites.

    Jessica teaches WordPress beginners how to use WordPress at her ‘WordPress in a day’ workshops.

    When Jessica is not on Google Analytics, she is eating Middle Eastern food or completing her challenge of visiting every UNESCO world heritage site, currently at 53/1092.

    Session

  • Kayleigh Thorpe

    I am a WordPress Specialist at 34SP.com. You’ll often find me socialising at tech meetups throughout the UK. When I’m not learning about WordPress, I like to travel and I am passionate about the WordPress community.

    Session

  • Simon Kraft

    Simon is an avid WordPress user since 2008. While working as a developer he also runs one or two German news outlets, is an active community member and spends quite some time organizing meetups and helping the community.

    Session

  • Tammie Lister

    Tammie Lister works at Automattic, where she is an Experience Designer donated to the WordPress.org project full time. Her background is varied and includes psychology, design, front end development and user experience. She is passionate about Open Source and community.

    Session

Introducing our first speakers!

While we’re still confirming all of our sessions, we want to introduce you to our first batch of speakers. Check back tomorrow for more!

 

  • Claire Brotherton

    Claire is a web developer, blog writer and accessibility advocate based in Edinburgh. Part of the WordPress accessibility team, Claire’s ideal clients are businesses, nonprofits and entrepreneurs who are passionate about access and inclusion. She loves learning and blogs regularly on her site A Bright Clear Web.

    Session

  • James Osborne

    Technical Account Manager at Google, he started to work in awarded agency with CMSs since 2011, where he had worked with small and medium business and created solutions that were sold over 40 nations. After that he moved to Google where he audit and develop strategies for publisher account managers to improve their web performance. Actually he provide supports globally for plugins such as Google AMP plugin and Site Kit by Google.

    Session

  • Nigel Pentland

    I’ll start by trying to convince folks why they should be considering the subject of security testing in relation to their WordPress sites. Assuming I’ve managed to convince you why, then I’ll move onto showing you just how anyone can use Kali (don’t worry, I’ll explain what Kali is!) as a tool for doing some basic security testing with a minimal learning curve to get started. This is being aimed at the novice level in terms of ‘security people’ but very inclusive in terms of anyone who is part of the WordPress community.

    Session

  • Rhys Wynne

    Rhys Wynne is a WordPress Plugin developer, author and speaker. In 2013 he penned bbPress Complete (ISBN-13: 978-1782167242) and has written plugins that have been downloaded over 100,000 times. Rhys has a keen interest in commercial WordPress development, SEO, security and open source technologies, and enjoys the community that has surrounded open source technologies. He can be found on Twitter at @dwinrhys. He also takes on Freelance work through his freelance portal – Dwinrhys.com

    Session

  • Tim Nash

    Tim is the 34SP.com WordPress Platform Lead & Developer advocate. He is responsible for the management of the WordPress platform and keeping thousands of sites running fast and staying secure. He is also known to give the odd talk here and there and when he can blog and appear randomly on Youtube. Tim’s own site is timnash.co.uk and he writes about everything from security to home automation with a healthy dose of WordPress and humour.

    Session

    • Hacking Tim 8th February 2020 at 4:00 pm GMT+0000 in Development
  • Tom J Nowell

    Lead developer for the VVV project, WordPress engineer, and Stack Exchange moderator, Tom is coming from Manchester UK.

    Tom has a particular interest in all things block editor, follow him on twitter at @tarendai

    Session

 

Call for Volunteers

The Call for Volunteers is now closed.

Thank you all who came forward to lend a hand! 👍🏽

Volunteers keep WordCamps running – sometimes literally. They support the organising team by helping with the dozens of little tasks that go into a successful WordCamp. If that sounds like hard work, it isn’t! Being a volunteer is a rewarding and fulfilling experience. It gives you the opportunity to meet and speak with attendees, help out with speakers, organisers, and be part of a brilliant day.

WordCamp volunteers need no previous experience. All you need is energy, enthusiasm, the ability to think on your feet, and a love for the WordPress community.

Continue reading Call for Volunteers