Check out the folks who attended WordCamp Toronto 2011:
You can mark yourself as going to this camp in your account settings!
Ruth Maude
SEO for WordPress
In this session we’ll look at
Jeremy Clarke
Get your feet wet with WordPress!
A fun, quick intro to the basics of WordPress. If you are a beginner, wanting to try out WordPress for the first time, this is the workshop for you. We’ll be working with the free, hosted accounts available through WordPress.com. Some of the things we’ll look at: changing your password, creating a static page, creating a blog post, adding photos to a post, simple changes to the look of your site, etc. You should leave this workshop with an idea of how WordPress works and info on how to get started. It’s a great first step before taking an intensive in-person or online course.
Participants are asked to fill in a quick sign-up form before attending so that we can ensure there are enough TA’s to help everyone. Everyone will also need to sign-up for a free wordpress.com account before the workshop and bring a laptop; free Wifi will be provided.
This workshop will run from 1 pm until 3 pm.
Led by Shannon Smith of Café Noir Design, Kathryn Presner of Zoonini Web Services, and Jeremy Clarke of Simian Uprising, with assistance from Al Davis of Telus, and Christine Rondeau of Bluelime Media.
What we will cover:
Christine Rondeau
Get your feet wet with WordPress!
A fun, quick intro to the basics of WordPress. If you are a beginner, wanting to try out WordPress for the first time, this is the workshop for you. We’ll be working with the free, hosted accounts available through WordPress.com. Some of the things we’ll look at: changing your password, creating a static page, creating a blog post, adding photos to a post, simple changes to the look of your site, etc. You should leave this workshop with an idea of how WordPress works and info on how to get started. It’s a great first step before taking an intensive in-person or online course.
Participants are asked to fill in a quick sign-up form before attending so that we can ensure there are enough TA’s to help everyone. Everyone will also need to sign-up for a free wordpress.com account before the workshop and bring a laptop; free Wifi will be provided.
This workshop will run from 1 pm until 3 pm.
Led by Shannon Smith of Café Noir Design, Kathryn Presner of Zoonini Web Services, and Jeremy Clarke of Simian Uprising, with assistance from Al Davis of Telus, and Christine Rondeau of Bluelime Media.
What we will cover:
Khori Armstrong
Mark Reale
Liesl Barrell
PM101 – Project Management for Small Business
Project management for small business owners and freelancers who can’t afford project managers but end up doing it themselves. Reduce the amount of time spent on PM-type activities by learning some of the art and science of managing projects… setting expectations and clear communications, handling clients and resources, etc.
Brendan Sera-Shriar
PressWork – Designing in a Live Preview Environment
Using PressWork as a case study on how we have revolutionized theme frameworks with modern standards like HTML 5, and thinking outside the box with better UI/UX and live preview environment design for different types of users.
Trevor Mills
Building Mobile Apps with WordPress
We love WordPress because of the flexibility it offers and the ease with which it is possible to do very interesting things. This session will introduce the idea of building native-feeling mobile apps from within WordPress using HTML5, CSS3 and Javascript. Distinct from just a mobile version of your site, a mobile app can actually be saved to the user’s device and be accessed offline. The possibilities are wide open for this new area of development. Besides offering lessons and insights for developing a mobile app from scratch, Trevor Mills from Top Quark will introduce a new plugin that can build an offline-capable, native-feeling app out of any WordPress custom post type.
Chip Bennett
Beyond the Guidelines: Theme Development Best Practices (Volume I)
As Theme developers become more accustomed to the Theme Review Guidelines, the overall quality of WordPress.org repository-hosted Themes has improved tremendously. However, ample opportunity for continual improvement remains. As the Theme Review Team continues to refine and improve the Guidelines with each new WordPress release, I believe that we can work together with the Theme developer community proactively to implement community-standard best practices. In this presentation, I will discuss areas for such best practices, including Theme inline documentation, proper copyright attribution and copyright declaration, Child-Theme readiness, proper enqueueing of scripts and stylesheets, and a few, other miscellaneous areas.
Alfred Ayache
WP Sandbox: Running WordPress on Your Local Machine
WordPress is all about sharing your thoughts and disseminating your ideas. Sometimes, though, you just want to try something out, or test a plugin you’ve downloaded, and it’s not for public consumption. In this presentation, Alfred Ayache introduces you to XAMPP, your very own, very private web stack, which allows you to install WordPress on your computer. He’ll then show you how to setup multiple domain names (aka virtual hosts), and even carry around all this open source goodness on a jumpdrive.
Christopher Ross
Make a Living by Giving it Away for Free
A presentation about how developing a free charity plugin for WordPress changed my career from struggling to stable, and why it’s possible for anybody to make a living with WordPress. How developers can personally profit from supporting the platform and how their lifestyles (personal and professional) can be improved by supporting in small ways.
Shannon Smith
Get your feet wet with WordPress!
A fun, quick intro to the basics of WordPress. If you are a beginner, wanting to try out WordPress for the first time, this is the workshop for you. We’ll be working with the free, hosted accounts available through WordPress.com. Some of the things we’ll look at: changing your password, creating a static page, creating a blog post, adding photos to a post, simple changes to the look of your site, etc. You should leave this workshop with an idea of how WordPress works and info on how to get started. It’s a great first step before taking an intensive in-person or online course.
Participants are asked to fill in a quick sign-up form before attending so that we can ensure there are enough TA’s to help everyone. Everyone will also need to sign-up for a free wordpress.com account before the workshop and bring a laptop; free Wifi will be provided.
This workshop will run from 1 pm until 3 pm.
Led by Shannon Smith of Café Noir Design, Kathryn Presner of Zoonini Web Services, and Jeremy Clarke of Simian Uprising, with assistance from Al Davis of Telus, and Christine Rondeau of Bluelime Media.
What we will cover:
Sandy Sidhu
Georgiana Laudi
Dale Mugford
Mobile WordPress
All things mobile + WordPress. Dale Mugford will discuss the plugins and options available to present your WordPress website on mobile devices and tablets, as well as the mobile tools available to publish content on the go with WordPress.
Dan Imbrogno
Building Better Plugins for WordPress
Learn how to build bigger, better, and cleaner plugins for WordPress in this interactive workshop. Participants will follow along with a tutorial plugin as they learn how to build their plugins with a class, use actions and filters, properly attach JavaScript and CSS, save options to the database and get their plugin ready for translation. (~ 1 hour)
Participants will also learn how to add their own tables to the WordPress database, how to build their own forms in the WordPress dashboard and how to use Ajax from both the viewer and administrator facing pages. (~ 2 hours)
Participants who attend this workshop are encouraged (but not required) to bring a laptop with a local web server that has WordPress installed so they can follow along. (See WP Sandbox.)
James McKenzie
Creating Custom Backend/Dashboard Processes to Make Clients Happy
How to turn WordPress into a much more powerful CMS by implementing custom post types and custom taxonomies to better organize a website’s content, and make it more intuitive for clients to add and edit content. I’ll demonstrate how to create custom fields and theme option pages to allow clients to add and edit content in a much more controlled way.
How to Use a Child Theme to Protect Your Template
Sooner or later the theme you are using will need that little change to make just right for you. Learn how to create a child theme so that your personal changes won’t be overwitten by a theme update.
Joe Rozsa
CUSTO(MY)IZE WordPress Themes with Photoshop
So many people use themes as-is when it’s easy to find image elements that can be changed or replaced with a little Photoshop work. Many people think they can’t easily customize their themes out of the box, but it’s just not true. In this presentation, you’ll learn how to customize out-of-the-box WordPress themes in Photoshop so you don’t have to use it as is.
Rick Radko
Don’t “Just paste this code in your functions.php”
Many snippets of code are available on the web to add functionality to your WordPress site. “Just paste this code in your functions.php”, used to be the refrain for adding those functions to your site. Now many themes are using the update system, which will overwrite the functions.php when updating and you will lose your changes!
A lot of functions that are key to your site operation, but not related to the theme, are also now being added to the functions.php. These functions should really be saved somewhere else, so your site won’t break when you change or update themes.
This talk will show anyone who uses WordPress how to easily create a very simple child theme, and a very simple personal plugin for saving theme changes and code snippets. It’s really very easy!
Al Davis
Get your feet wet with WordPress!
A fun, quick intro to the basics of WordPress. If you are a beginner, wanting to try out WordPress for the first time, this is the workshop for you. We’ll be working with the free, hosted accounts available through WordPress.com. Some of the things we’ll look at: changing your password, creating a static page, creating a blog post, adding photos to a post, simple changes to the look of your site, etc. You should leave this workshop with an idea of how WordPress works and info on how to get started. It’s a great first step before taking an intensive in-person or online course.
Participants are asked to fill in a quick sign-up form before attending so that we can ensure there are enough TA’s to help everyone. Everyone will also need to sign-up for a free wordpress.com account before the workshop and bring a laptop; free Wifi will be provided.
This workshop will run from 1 pm until 3 pm.
Led by Shannon Smith of Café Noir Design, Kathryn Presner of Zoonini Web Services, and Jeremy Clarke of Simian Uprising, with assistance from Al Davis of Telus, and Christine Rondeau of Bluelime Media.
What we will cover:
Shared Hosting & WordPress
In this session, new users will learn the ins and outs of using WordPress with a shared hosting account including how to choose a service provider, registering a domain name, pointing or transferring an existing domain, how to set up WordPress, how to use FTP, and how to migrate a WordPress site from one provider to another.
Kathryn Presner
Get your feet wet with WordPress!
A fun, quick intro to the basics of WordPress. If you are a beginner, wanting to try out WordPress for the first time, this is the workshop for you. We’ll be working with the free, hosted accounts available through WordPress.com. Some of the things we’ll look at: changing your password, creating a static page, creating a blog post, adding photos to a post, simple changes to the look of your site, etc. You should leave this workshop with an idea of how WordPress works and info on how to get started. It’s a great first step before taking an intensive in-person or online course.
Participants are asked to fill in a quick sign-up form before attending so that we can ensure there are enough TA’s to help everyone. Everyone will also need to sign-up for a free wordpress.com account before the workshop and bring a laptop; free Wifi will be provided.
This workshop will run from 1 pm until 3 pm.
Led by Shannon Smith of Café Noir Design, Kathryn Presner of Zoonini Web Services, and Jeremy Clarke of Simian Uprising, with assistance from Al Davis of Telus, and Christine Rondeau of Bluelime Media.
What we will cover:
Mo Jangda
Managing your Editorial Workflow
A look into features, techniques, and plugins (like Edit Flow) that can help optimize your writing and editing workflow within WordPress. Whether you’re a individual blogger or a team or writers and editors, we’ll explore ways to maximize your WordPress efficiency in your journey to create great content.
Linda Dessau
How to Be a Weekly Blogger
How many of your prospective clients are primed and ready to hear from you right now? So what’s stopping you from posting to your blog every week and sending that content to your mailing list?
We will discuss:
• how one feature article can feed your blog and newsletter for an entire month
• how planning and batching can save you time
• how to provide more value in every single post
Ron Rennick
Andrea Rennick
These are the people that make this event happen. They work tirelessly for weeks and months to plan, coordinate, and execute the best event possible. If you get a chance to thank them, please do!
Andy McIlwain (+ add me)
Al Davis (+ add me)
Craig Taylor (+ add me)
Details TBD.
Attendees (0 ratings)
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Topic CoverageWas there a variety of topics to choose from? Topic Coverage | — |
Session QualityHow interesting and polished were the sessions? Session Quality | — |
Speaker DiversityWas there diverse representation in the speaker lineup? Speaker Diversity | — |
Venue QualityHow was the cleanliness and layout of the venue? If online, how was the video platform? Venue Quality | — |
Food QualityHow would you rate the food quality? Thinks lunches, coffee breaks, and afterparty. Food Quality | — |
AffordabilityWas this event affordable for you? Affordability | — |
Networking OpportunitiesWere there networking opportunities? Think about parties, hallway track, and event attendance. Networking Opportunities | — |
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Speakers (0 ratings)
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Organizer CommunicationHow well did the organizers communicate about the event? Organizer Communication | — |
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Food QualityHow would you rate the food quality? Think speaker/sponsor dinner, lunches, and afterparty. Food Quality | — |
Session AttendanceWere the sessions well attended? How about your session? Session Attendance | — |
AffordabilityWas it affordable for you to speak at this event? Affordability | — |
Sponsors (0 ratings)
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Proximity to AttendeesWas the sponsor area in a high-traffic location? Proximity to Attendees | — |
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Affordability/ValueWas it affordable for you to sponsor this event? Do you feel like you got value in return? Affordability/Value | — |
Event AttendanceHow well was this event attended? Do you feel there were enough people to justify your presence? Event Attendance | — |
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