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WordPress Briefing - A WordPress Podcast

Episode 86: My First WordPress Experience Episode 85: WordPress in Education Episode 84: A WordPress 6.6 Sneak Peek Episode 83: Learning Pathways Episode 82: WCEU Hallway Track Episode 81: It’s your first WordCamp? Welcome! Episode 80: Unlocking Your WordPress Potential with Learn WordPress Tools Episode 79: Why Start a WordPress Media Corps (and Why Now?) Episode 78: Guided Growth: Cultivating Contributors Through Mentorship Episode 77: Let’s Talk About Data Liberation Episode 76: A WordPress 6.5 Sneak Peek Episode 75: WordCamp Asia 2024 Unwrapped Episode 74: Kickstart (Or Level-Up) Your Contributor Journey Episode 73: Inside the Interactivity API Episode 72: Why Your Website Matters Episode 71: New Year, New Blog! Episode 70: A Look Ahead at WordPress in 2024 Episode 69: Reflections on State of the Word Episode 68: Toward a More Interconnected Web Episode 67: Openverse & Photo Directory Rewind Episode 66: Advocating Open Source Solutions Episode 65: Little Sun Success Episode 64: Patterns in WordPress Episode 63: A WordPress 6.4 Sneak Peek Episode 62: Enterprise Clients and the Business of WordPress Episode 61: Community, Summit, all at Washington D.C. Episode 60: Sneak a Peek at WordPress 6.3 with Special Guest Kira Schroder Episode 59: A Polyglot’s WordPress Episode 58: A New Wave for WordPress Events Episode 57: The Power of WordPress Mentorship Episode 56: What to Know About WordPress Playground Episode 55: Happy Anniversary, WordPress! Episode 54: A Bill of Rights for the Open Web Episode 53: A Look at WordPress 6.2 “Dolphy” Episode 52: Workflows and Phase Three Visioning with Special Guest Héctor Prieto Episode 51: Is Routine a Rut? Episode 50: 3 Interesting Trends from WordCamp Asia Episode 49: Everything You Need to Know About the Community Summit! Episode 48: What Does Concluding a Gutenberg Phase Really Mean? Episode 47: Letter from the Executive Director Episode 46: The WP Bloopers Podcast Episode 45: State of the Word Reflections Episode 44: Minors, Majors, and Why We Have So Many Releases Episode 43: Openverse & Photo Directory– What Are They, and How Are They Different? Episode 42: Something Spooky This Way Comes Episode 41: WordPress 6.1 Sneak Peek with Special Guest Nick Diego Episode 40: All Things Testing with Special Guests Anne McCarthy and Brian Alexander Episode 38: All About LearnWP with Special Guest Hauwa Abashiya Episode 37: The World of WordPress on World Wide Web Day Episode 36: Beginner’s Guide to Contributions 2.0 Episode 35: Five for the Future’s True Intentions Episode 34: WordPress 6.1 is Coming! Episode 33: Some Important Questions from WCEU Episode 32: An Open Source Reading List Episode 31: Open Source & Accessibility– Celebrating Global Accessibility Awareness Day With Guest Joe Devon Episode 30: A Sneak Peek at WordPress 6.0 Episode 29: How to Make a WordPress Blog Episode 28: Coming to a WordCamp Near You: A Return to In-Person WP Events Episode 27: Is WordPress Made for Me? Episode 26: Matt Mullenweg on Ukraine, Community, and WordPress Five Cents on Five for the Future – WordPress News Episode 24: Three Goals in 2022 Episode 23: A letter from WordPress’ Executive Director Episode 22: A Carol of Thanks Episode 21: All Things Block Themes! Episode 20: WordPress=Blogging+ Episode 19: The People of WordPress Episode 18: The Economics of WordPress Episode 17: WordPressing Your Way to Digital Literacy Episode 16: A Sneak Peek at WordPress 5.9 Episode 15: A Very WordPress Blooper Episode 14: The Art and Science of Accessibility Episode 13: Cherishing WordPress Diversity Episode 12: WordPress – In Person! Episode 11: WordCamp Europe 2021 in Review Episode 10: Finding the Good In Disagreement Episode 9: The Cartography of WordPress Episode 8: The Commons of Images Episode 7: Your Opinion is Our Opportunity Episode 6: Who Is WordPress? Episode 5: Talking Full Site Editing with Matías Ventura Episode 4: How WordPress Improves Episode 3: My Typical Day as WordPress’s Executive Director Episode 2: WordPress is Free(dom) Episode 1: Welcome to your WP Briefing
Contributor Stories Live from WordCamp US! – WordPress News
2022-09-19 · via WordPress Briefing - A WordPress Podcast

In the thirty-ninth episode of the WordPress Briefing, hear contributors at WordCamp US share stories about their why for using WordPress and attending WordCamps.

Have a question you’d like answered? You can submit them to wpbriefing@wordpress.org, either written or as a voice recording.

Credits

Editor: Dustin Hartzler
Logo: Javier Arce
Production: Santana Inniss and Chloé Bringmann
Song: Fearless First by Kevin MacLeod

Guests

Topher DeRosia
Jen Miller
Courtney Robertson
Kathy Drewien
Alex Stine
Courtney Patubo Kranzke
Dustin Hartzler
Ricardas Kudirka

References

WordPress Translation Day September 28, 2022
WooSesh October 11-13, 2022
All Things Open October 30-November 2, 2022

Transcript

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:00:00] 

Hello, everyone! And welcome to the WordPress Briefing, the podcast where you can catch quick explanations of some of the ideas behind the WordPress open source project and the community around it, as well as get a small list of big things coming up in the next two weeks. I’m your host, Josepha Haden Chomphosy. 

Here we go!

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:00:41] 

For folks who are new to WordPress in the past couple of years, you may have heard people talk about WordPress events with a sort of passion that really is hard to describe. For me, I know our events are the dark matter of what makes this global, fully distributed, multifaceted project come together so well in the end.

But I also know that WordPressers have so many different reasons for coming together. So we took a little wander through WordCamp US to get their take on why they use WordPress and also why they go to WordCamps.

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:01:13] 

So WordCamp US is back in person for the first time since 2019. What are you most excited about?

[Topher 00:01:19] 

I am Topher.

Seeing everyone, the interpersonal relationships, the communication, the expressions on people’s faces that you don’t get via email or Slack or whatever. Just being near people again and enjoying each other’s company.

[Jen Miller 00:01:35] 

My name is Jen Miller.

I was most excited to see my friends. It’s been a long time to try to maintain connections via social media and, you know, texting and phone calls. But being here and being a part of the WordPress community has made everything great.

[Courtney Robertson 00:01:54] 

Courtney Robertson.

Contributor day, of course, that’s how I got really connected to the WordPress community. And I am hoping we have a great turnout.

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:02:02] 

How long have you been a contributor to WordPress?

[Kathy Drewien 00:02:05] 

Hi, I’m Kathy Drewien.

I started in 2008 by attending my first WordCamp. Two years later, I was part of the organizing team for WordCamp Atlanta. I have been on that team for one role or another. Well, I can’t tell you how many years now. From then, until now.

[Alex Stine 00:02:24] 

My name is Alex Stine. About six years now.

[Topher 00:02:28] 

About 12 years.

I started going to WordCamp, then working in the support forums, and just grew from there.

[Courtney Robertson 00:02:24] 

I started checking guests in, at my first WordCamp in 2009, which I see as one avenue of contributing. I joined a team officially in 2014. 

[Courtney Patubo Kranzke 00:02:47] 

My name is Courtney Patubo Kranzke.

I have been an on-and-off contributor to WordPress since like the mid-2000s, but I’ve been a sponsored contributor since 2016.

[Dustin Hartzler 00:03:02] 

My name is Dustin Hartzler.

I started a WordPress podcast in 2010. And I did like 500 episodes in a row without a break and without a week worth of rest. So I consider that my contribution to WordPress. I have a couple of core contributions, like I, I fixed a little bug here, a little bug there in a couple of releases, I think back in the four eras, 4.1 or 4.2 or something.

2010 is when I really got started in giving back, and, like, sharing my knowledge with the WordPress community.

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:03:28] 

Why is it important for you to attend WordCamps or contribute to the WordPress project?

[Ricardas Kudirka 00:03:33] 

My name is Ricardas Kudirka.

Basically, for everyone who’s using WordPress, it’s really important to understand how big the community is that we have here. So the community is an important and crucial part of WordPress.

And for it to grow, you need to attend the WordCamps, you need to share knowledge, and you need to meet people. So networking here and while meeting the exciting people who are developing WordPress or who are contributing to it, who are providing the services, who enable people to use WordPress.

That’s a crucial point for everyone to attend.

[Kathy Drewien 00:04:05] 

It’s important to attend them because it’s very hard to describe them. We are not like any other thing you have ever done in your life. You have to be here to get it. And then once you get it, you wanna do more of it. It’s magical. It’s magical. There’s no way to get that experience without being here.

In terms of contributing, it’s a responsible thing to do. You want to give back instead of get, get, get. In the beginning, we’re all about the get, get, get. And then you go, oh my gosh. I didn’t know. I didn’t know I could do this. I didn’t know I had to write code. I can actually just stand around and talk to people and contribute to the project.

[Jen Miller 00:04:50] 

Well, it’s a community effort, and so if we want it to progress and grow, we need to put our own individual effort into the community.

Plus, we make friends, we make connections, and we find people who we can help and who can help us.

[Alex Stine 00:05:07]

I feel it is important to support the community that got me my start in technology and make sure that people understand that accessibility is very much a requirement.

You know, we need to make sure we keep the community inclusive for all.

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:05:21]

What is your favorite way to WordPress?

[Courtney Patubo Kranzke 00:05:24] 

I started with WordPress as a personal blogger. So it continues to be my favorite way to use WordPress. But, my use has evolved to using it for work as well as a place to share my photography and food blogging.

[Courtney Robertson 00:05:42] 

My favorite way to WordPress is through the Training team. Most of the things that I write these days are on make.wordpress.org/training and or learn.wordpress.org.

I love teaching people about WordPress, helping people at all skill levels advance, and that’s where you’ll find me around the WordPress Training team.

[Dustin  Hartzler 00:05:59] 

My favorite way to WordPress is just building cool things. Like I have a website, my wife has a couple of websites, and me just trying to learn things and trying to do them myself. Yesterday, there was a session, a 15-minute long session, and I learned how to customize the options available for different core WordPress blocks.

I didn’t realize that you could just make a button and like make a default like here’s the style for the default button. So every button’s exactly the same on the site. Like how cool is that? I like the side of customizing WordPress to make it easier for people who are non-techy like me to use my site, like my wife, and whatnot.

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:06:30] 

How do you use WordPress in your day-to-day life?

[Topher 00:06:32] 

It’s sort of a universal tool for me. I blog, and I do podcasts.

I enjoy drinking whiskey, so I built a rating system for it. And I use it as a notepad, a scratch pad. I use it as my photography backup system. Just kind of as a universal tool for everything

[Alex Stine 00:06:53]

So I currently am one of the Accessibility team reps.

I’m a core contributor, Guttenberg contributor, the occasional meta contributor, and the occasional training team contributor.

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:07:05]

Well, if that doesn’t convince you to go to a WordCamp or start your own meetup group, I just don’t know what will. Big thanks to everyone who sat down with us there in San Diego.

[Josepha Haden Chomphosy 00:07:23]

And now it’s time for our small list of big things.

First thing, WordPress Global Translation Day is coming up next week on September 28th. This is a great opportunity to learn more about the hard work that goes into translating all of this software for folks all around the world. If you want to learn more about how you could contribute to translations, I’ll have a link in the show notes for you.

The second thing is that WooSesh is coming up on October 11th through 13th, 2022. This one is not an in-person event. It’s a WPSessions event, but it specifically talks about how to get some eCommerce going on your WordPress site. So if you’ve been thinking about how to get a shop on your site, or just making your current shop a bit more complicated, then this is the event for you.

And the third thing on our list today is All Things Open. They are hosting a hybrid event this year from October 31st through November 2nd. This event isn’t specific to WordPress, but it is specific to open source and one of the best resources for learning some OSS basics. So if you’ve been interested in learning more about how this whole open source thing is an idea that will change our generation, then set your sights on that event. I will have a link in the show notes there as well.

And that, my friends, is your small list of big things. Thank you for tuning in today for the WordPress Briefing. I’m your host, Josepha Haden Chomphosy. And I’ll see you again in a couple of weeks.