EDUCHUDS: the Gentrification of Web-Based Education
Jim Groom Given that web-based education has been dominated by proprietary software companies through more generalized visions of the horror of the open web, this presentation will use clips from such...
View ArticleUsing WordPress as a Research Blog
Jeremy Boggs In October, I attended the Digital Humanities API workshop at the University of Western Ontario. Almost all the workshop attendees generally agreed that, for any scholars to work with APIs...
View ArticleWriting secure plugins
Mark Jaquith WordPress plugins are infinitely powerful. This power makes WordPress great, but it also gives plugin developers the ability to shoot themselves (and the users of their plugins) in the...
View ArticleVote for your favorites!
We have a chunk of time tomorrow at Mason Hall for lightning sessions from today’s most popular speakers. Want to nominate a speaker you thought was awesome, or one you were super sad to have missed?...
View ArticleTheme/Plugin Competition Finalists
These teams will be on stage at Mason Hall today to get their entries judged: Themes 1. A fork of the Thematic Framework (by Ian Stewart) and an original child theme. - Daisy Olsen http://wpmama.com/...
View ArticleFifty Sites, Ten Months, One WordPress CMS
Jamie Trowbridge Want to find out how to take WordPress beyond blogging and use it to publish a full-fledged, media-rich website? Dan Goldman and Jamie Trowbridge discussed how WNET.ORG (Channel...
View ArticleLightning Round Speakers
A few people have asked that I publish the names of the lightning round speakers from Sunday afternoon at mason Hall. I guess they were a little too lightning fast when they introduced themselves!...
View ArticleFinal Shirts
Hey everyone. Sorry this took so long, I got sidetracked by a car wreck and the flu. Shirts! While most people got their WordCampNYC shirts at the event, there were a few people who did not because we...
View ArticleShow Me the Money!
WordCamps take a lot of effort to produce, and NYC was no exception. With 8 content tracks, around 60 speakers and over 700 attendees, I think everyone who came was aware of how big an effort it was to...
View ArticleWordCampNYC Finances (or, Ode to WordCamp Organizers)
By now, I’m sure you’ve heard the amazing news: WordCampNYC was able to donate $28,069.25 to the newly formed WordPress Foundation! In hindsight, this is quite remarkable, considering we were in the...
View ArticleEDUCHUDS: the Gentrification of Web-Based Education
Jim Groom Given that web-based education has been dominated by proprietary software companies through more generalized visions of the horror of the open web, this presentation will use clips from such...
View ArticleUsing WordPress as a Research Blog
Jeremy Boggs In October, I attended the Digital Humanities API workshop at the University of Western Ontario. Almost all the workshop attendees generally agreed that, for any scholars to work with APIs...
View ArticleWriting secure plugins
Mark Jaquith WordPress plugins are infinitely powerful. This power makes WordPress great, but it also gives plugin developers the ability to shoot themselves (and the users of their plugins) in the...
View ArticleVote for your favorites!
We have a chunk of time tomorrow at Mason Hall for lightning sessions from today’s most popular speakers. Want to nominate a speaker you thought was awesome, or one you were super sad to have missed?...
View ArticleTheme/Plugin Competition Finalists
These teams will be on stage at Mason Hall today to get their entries judged: Themes 1. A fork of the Thematic Framework (by Ian Stewart) and an original child theme. – Daisy Olsen http://wpmama.com/...
View ArticleFifty Sites, Ten Months, One WordPress CMS
Jamie Trowbridge Want to find out how to take WordPress beyond blogging and use it to publish a full-fledged, media-rich website? Dan Goldman and Jamie Trowbridge discussed how WNET.ORG (Channel...
View ArticleLightning Round Speakers
A few people have asked that I publish the names of the lightning round speakers from Sunday afternoon at mason Hall. I guess they were a little too lightning fast when they introduced themselves!...
View ArticleFinal Shirts
Hey everyone. Sorry this took so long, I got sidetracked by a car wreck and the flu. Shirts! While most people got their WordCampNYC shirts at the event, there were a few people who did not because we...
View ArticleShow Me the Money!
WordCamps take a lot of effort to produce, and NYC was no exception. With 8 content tracks, around 60 speakers and over 700 attendees, I think everyone who came was aware of how big an effort it was to...
View ArticleWordCampNYC Finances (or, Ode to WordCamp Organizers)
By now, I’m sure you’ve heard the amazing news: WordCampNYC was able to donate $28,069.25 to the newly formed WordPress Foundation! In hindsight, this is quite remarkable, considering we were in the...
View Article
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