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Dropped stitches and tangled yarn: a call to simplify WordPress
Presented by Tammie Lister
Over time, products get tangled. There’s a race to add new features, fix the most bugs, enhance the user experience – until eventually, your product is a confusing and complicated mess, like a tangled ball of yarn. This complexity is a natural progression for any product, but it’s possible to improve the situation. Join Tammie to discuss methods to distil a product flow down to its most essential parts, using the WordPress user experience as an example.
Good for all experience levels, and for people who work with other people.
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WordPress for the Future
Presented by Simon Kraft
Every time, you load a website — even this one — a certain amount of carbon is emitted to the atmosphere. These emissions are tied to the amount of energy consumed in the process of delivering the websites content to your browser.
Let’s explore options for both, reducing your own websites greenhouse gas emissions and helping others to do the same by making a third of the web smarter, leaner and more efficient.
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Building a block
Presented by Tom J Nowell
Let’s build a Gutenberg block! Tom will cover building a basic block in javascript, and in PHP. A great opportunity to refresh on the basics and lay a solid foundation. Suitable for intermediate developers
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You’ve got a website – now what? Get optimising! A beginner’s SEO guide
Presented by Jessica Thomas
Learn how to improve your website’s organic traffic. Your website is online for people to find you – so make sure the search engines can crawl and index your website! Discover the plugins, themes, tricks and tips you need for SEO success. In this talk attendees will learn how to optimise their WordPress website for search engines. Leave with a checklist of how you can move your website from page 21 to page 1. All the tools I recommend in this talk are free.
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Security testing: outside looking in
Presented by 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.
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Examining the Accessibility of Popular WordPress Page Builders
Presented by Claire Brotherton
Page builders like Beaver Builder and Elementor are immensely popular because they let you create sophisticated layouts quickly and with minimal code knowledge. But are the web pages they produce accessible? I take both builders for a spin to see whether their templated content meets accessibility standards and what room there is for improvement.
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Scaling Effectively with WordPress
Presented by Chris Brosnan
One of the most common misconceptions about WordPress is that it does not scale well and is only for small sites. This assumption is untrue, but it exists because of wider misconceptions about the use of WordPress and its purpose. With good planning and consideration before and during a WordPress project’s lifecycle, we can ensure that the project scales well and has the flexibility to add new features without too much scope creep or performance impact. By avoiding waste, using coding standards, and adopting a serious software development mindset to WordPress projects it is easy to build WordPress sites that will scale effectively. This talk will introduce these concepts.
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A Developer’s Guide to Working with Marketing Teams
Presented by Rhys Wynne
As somebody who has been both a developer and marketing team leader in my career, I’ve been able to see when projects go wrong between developers and outside or internal marketing team. In this talk, I’ll share a few areas on where relationships break down, how to avoid problems before they arise, and also tips to get marketing teams on your side so you can both serve a happy client.
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How…. to…. fi..x… slo..w…. s..ites…
Presented by Kayleigh Thorpe
A talk about why WordPress websites might be running slower than we’d like them to, how to pinpoint what is slowing the site down, and things we can all do to speed our sites up.
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Create a user-first experience with AMP
Presented by James Osborne
What does it mean a user-first application? It is an application that lands in four pillars: Fast, Secure, engaging and Integrated. At this Workshop, we will explain the reason why we should change our mindset to a user-first mindset to create a better experience for our users. And AMP helps on that, AMP or Accelerated Mobile Pages is a framework with three important tools, AMP HTML, AMP JS and AMP Cache. AMP HTML has a set of components that accelerate our development process and AMP JS take care of our application performance and AMP Cache is the last ingredient to provide the best experience the feature that enhances the performance of content delivering. After understanding those core items we are going to convert our WordPress Application in a User-first application using AMP. At the end we will do an exercise with five core components: amp-img amp-youtube amp-sidebar amp-lightbox amp-socialshare Let’s code!.
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Remote working: How to make it work for you
Presented by David Artiss
Many WordCamp attendees are remote employees. Most will tell you how great remote working is and that it works incredibly well for a lot of businesses. But let’s be honest, it’s not for everyone. While several large companies have tried it and failed, in this talk, we’ll reveal what often gets forgotten: what a business needs to do to make it work. Further, how individuals can decide if remote work really is the future of working for them.
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Hacking Tim
Presented by Tim Nash
It’s a new decade and for many of us, new starts. For me this year is all about productivity and workflows. In this talk, I walk through my workflows and processes I have been optimising to keep me going as a developer, a sysadmin, and a tinkerer. From terminals, to running shoes, everything is hackable.
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Optional excursion: secret surprise
Presented by WC Glasgow organising team
After WordCamp Glasgow wraps up, we have arranged a very special tour for our attendees, speakers and volunteers of one of Glasgow’s best kept secrets. It’s a five minute walk from the venue. Bring your sense of wonder, and maybe a jaunty tune.
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Afterparty: OneUp, Royal Exchange Square
Please remember to bring your lanyard for admission