Just in case you missed it, WordCamp NYC was just announced for August 2-3, 2014! Check out the new site, and be sure to subscribe over there!
Speaker Presentations
You wanted it… you got it! WordCamp NYC Speaker presentations… all on one page. Sorted by Presentation name:
Frederick Townes
15 Secrets of Top Media Companies
Kathryn Presner
A Beginner’s Guide to WordPress
Andy Stratton
Accomplish It With Core: Sliders, Galleries & More
Mel Choyce
Alas, No Mind Meld: Designer-Developer Communication
Kimanzi Constable
Breaking Through With Your Stor
Steve Bruner / Kevin Miller
Build Powerful Websites and Web Applications with Piklist
Garth C. Koyle
Can you Go Commercial
Scott Taylor
Cloud, Cache, and Configs
Tracy Levesque
Creating Custom Child Themes for WordPress
Alex Sapountzis and Jeffrey Marx
Customizing the Custom Loop
Austin Gunter
Developing Digital Marketing into your WordPress
Ro Gupta
Disqus & WordPress – Getting the Most from Community Cross Pollination
Melissa Cahill
DIY SEO Using WordPress
Jeremy Clarke
DRY CSS – Theries, methods and tools for efficient and scalable Stylesheets.
Jodie Barr
eCommerce Choices for WordPress
Tammie Lister
Express Yourself With BuddyPress Themes
Lex Dreitser
Google Adwords and WordPress
Alex Mirand
Google Loves WordPress – Blogging For SEO
Max Cutler
Integrating with WordPress via XML-RPC
Andrew Christian
Intro to HTML5 and CSS3
Josh Leuze
jQuery The WordPress Way
Aaron Jorbin
Lessons from Making Millions of Websites More Accessible
Helen Hou-Sandi
Making Custom Content Management Disappear into the WordPress Admin
Kenny Katzgrau
Making WordPress Fly: Optimizing Your Servers for Performance
Jason Coleman
Membership Sites with WordPress: Paid Memberships Pro
Erick Hitter
Moving Beyond the Codex: Learning WordPress from Itself
Mike Toppa
Object Oriented Programming for WordPress Plugin Development
Marko Heijnen
Rocking a WordPress network
Meeky Hwang
Save Your Code: One Codebase, 9 Blogs with WordPress Multisite Using Sub-domains and Sub-directories
MaryBeth Coudal
Social Media and Social Movements
Kevin Cristiano
Speeding up WordPress on Shared Hosting
Mason James
Supporting WordPress
John Havlik
The Power of Custom Post Types
Boone Gorges
Using Git for Sane WordPress Development
Rindy Portfolio
Using Web Fonts in WordPress
Justin Beckwith
WebMatrix 2: Uber geek in designer clothes
Jake Goldman
What Would Core Do?
Jason Paul
WordPress as Custom CMS
Dana Skallman
WordPress for Nonprofits: Using CiviCRM
Baynard Bailey
WordPress for Teaching and Learning
Michael Basto
WordPress on Amazon Web Services from Start to Finish
Sonja Leix
WordPress Responsive Design Bootcamp
Brad Williams
WordPress Security
Sarah Whinnem
WordPress Template Hierarchy
Submit your questions for Mark Jaquith or Nacin
Breaking News! Sunday’s schedule (Updated)
Breaking News! Sunday’s schedule has come to fruition. Repeating sessions were chosen based on demand, but all in all there was much gained from everyone’s sessions today. Thanks to everyone who offered requests for repeat sessions and to the speakers for being willing to do it all over again. See full schedule here!
Today’s the Day!
Hello there WordCampers! Are you excited yet?
Registration begins today at 8:00 AM, and the weekend officially kicks of at 9:00 AM.
Happiness Bar is in 4225
Hangout Room is in 9135
Enter Baruch College on 25th St between Lexington & 3rd Ave.
To get there, take the 6 Train or N/Q/R Train to 23rd Street and walk to Lexington Avenue and 25th Street.
Make sure to keep an eye on this site and on our Twitter Feed for up to the minute details throughout the day.
Wifi details!!!
Field: Baruch-Guest
Pass: b@rucHi2W0rdC@mp
Submit your Unconference Workshops
We will have two rooms for a total of eight Unconference workshops. Here’s your chance to share your WordPress knowledge at WordCamp. Your submission ideas will be aggregated to create sessions that we will post on the website during lunch on Saturday. Attendees will vote tomorrow afternoon to determine which presentations will be part of the Unconference series!
Submissions must be in by noon tomorrow (Saturday).
Are you ready for WordCamp NYC?
Wow, the wait is almost over! WordCamp NYC is less than 48 hours away, and the excitement is building. Here are some final details we think you should know before the big day. This is a lot of info, so pay attention:
Wifi:
There’s been a lot of buzz about this on Twitter, so let’s clear things up. As in years past, Wifi access for attendees will be limited due to venue constraints. The network can’t handle a huge amount of traffic, so please exercise restraint when using the internet. If possible, bring your own internet; if you have one of the many smartphones that have a Personal Hotspot feature, do us a favor and use that instead of the college Wifi. Or better yet, leave the laptop, pay attention to the speakers you came to see, and network with the hundreds of other attendees who come to WordCamp.
Transportation:
As of right now, there is no maintenance scheduled by the MTA that should affect WordCamp, but a constant in the city that never sleeps is that everything can change. Be sure to keep an eye on the MTA’s Website for up to date information. We’ll post information on this site as well as on our Twitter account if anything changes.
Registration:
Registration opens at 8am on Saturday morning, so why not get there early to avoid the crowd? The day officially begins at 9am, and you don’t want to be stuck waiting for your badge while sessions are going on. If you are late, Registration will be open all day Saturday, just in case. Baruch College is located at 55 Lexington Avenue @ 25th street. The actual entrance is on 25th street (which would be the side of the building that isn’t covered in blue scaffolding).
Badges:
Due to venue security, all attendees must wear their WordCamp badge at all times while in the secured area of the college. We started printing the badges yesterday, so if you didn’t register (or fill out your attendee profile) by Tuesday, June 5th, we will not have a pre-printed badge for you. We will have blank badges for those attendees. Please take care of your badge, as you will need it to last for two days (and to get admission to the after party).
T-shirts:
Every attendee will get a t-shirt. When you will be able to receive it depends on when you registered. If you registered (and completed your attendee profile) on or before Tuesday, May 29th, you will be able to receive your t-shirt in the size that appears on your attendee badge at registration. If you registered after that date, you will need to wait until after lunch to get your t-shirt.
Saturday Sessions:
We have 13 rooms of sessions going, so there will be plenty to see. Most of the sessions will be taking place in the Vertical Campus (the same building as registration), but the WordPress 101 track will be across 25th Street in the Newman Library building on the 6th floor.
Saturday Lunch:
Just like the t-shirts, there was a deadline to be guaranteed your meal preference. If you registered on or before Tuesday June 5th and completed your attendee profile, you will be guaranteed the meal that you chose (omnivore, kosher, vegetarian, or vegan). If you did not complete your registration by then, we assumed that you are an omnivore. Please stand by your meal choice, as we didn’t order a lot of extra food.
Saturday Night After Party:
What would WordCamp be without an after party? This year, we’re holding the after party at Slate, an awesome club on 21st Street between 5th and 6th avenues. The party begins at 7pm, two hours after the final session of the day, so you have plenty of time to get some dinner before partying the night away. In fact, Slate has a pretty good food menu, so you can eat there if you want to get in early. Please have your WordCamp badge with you to ensure you will be admitted to the party.
Sunday Sessions:
Doors open at 10am on Sunday, so don’t party too hard. There will be a few more planned sessions, but most of the sessions will be repeat sessions from Saturday (so you can see something you missed) or Unconference sessions that any attendee can propose. We’ll be opening proposals tomorrow, so if you’d like to present, get your thinking cap on now. We’ll take a vote during the day on Saturday, so keep an eye on this site (and on Twitter) for more details. There will also be a room for hacking plugins, themes, core WP, and even working on the Codex. If you want to contribute to WordPress, this is the place to do it.
Sunday Lunch:
There will be a lunch period on Sunday, but sadly, a second free lunch wasn’t included in our budget. There are a lot of great places to get lunch in the area, mostly on 3rd avenue.
Sunday WordPress.com workshop:
The full-day WordPress.com Beginner workshop will take place in the Newman Library Building on Sunday. This is the only session that required pre-registration due to the fact that we will be using the computer lab (and thus need computer accounts for all of the attendees). We will be doing a separate check-in for this workshop, so please make sure you received a confirmation email saying that you are on the list to go.
Sunday Q & A with Mark Jaquith and Andrew Nacin:
As our big finale of the weekend, we’ll be hosting a Q & A with two of the guys that help make WordPress. Get your questions in now by filling out this form. We’ll pose as many questions as we have time for.
Wow, that’s a lot of information! Thanks for reading all the way through. We hope you have a great time at WordCamp!
Our Gold Sponsor – NorthPoint Solutions
We had a chance to meet with Arwin Holmes and Shruti Shah of our Gold Sponsor, NorthPoint , the other day. WordCamps take a considerable amount of resources to happen, with the most precious commodities being time and money… and NorthPoint has stepped up as this year’s only Gold Sponsor.
So who is NorthPoint and what do they do with WordPress?They are an enterprise digital platform strategy and technology-consulting firm, based in New York City, with two distinct Practices: Financial Services and Content Solutions.
Odd Mix? Perhaps, but as Arwin Holmes explained, they have felt that they could market Enterprise Content Management Systems to their clients using WordPress. Arwin went on to say that since WordPress 3.0, they see the platform as a full-fledged CMS that supports Enterprise initiatives.
NorthPoint considers themselves as being platform agnostic; their functional domain knowledge allows them to successfully recommend and implement the right solution to support their clients’ on-going business strategy/situation. They have a significant track record of success having delivered digital platforms for some of the world’s most admired and leading organizations in Publishing, Media, Education, Healthcare, Entertainment, and Not-for-Profit industries. What they like about WordPress is that they see its development eclipsing other platforms and supporting the Enterprise. Arwin stated that the current development and release cycle that WordPress is on, with a release every six months, is a major factor.
Giving back to the WordPress Community is a big part of open source software and NorthPoint has presented at WordCamp Boston on Enterprise Do’s and Don’ts (You can check out the video here). In addition, NorthPoint feels that the Multi-Site capabilities of WordPress are a tremendous feature that lends itself to the Enterprise. Meeky Hwang will be presenting in the Multi-site Track on Saturday at 11:30 Check it out here.
Beyond presenting, NorthPoint felt that becoming a sponsor at WordCamp NYC was a way to support the community close to home.
Look for NorthPoint this weekend at WordCamp NYC and join us in thanking them for their support.
Have you filled out your Attendee profile?
Are you listed on the Attendee page? Are you there, but you see a funny Gravatar?
We’re printing badges on Wednesday, so please fill in your information asap.
I purchased a ticket and I’m not listed on the Attendee page!
- Check your inbox and find the email titled: “Ticket Purchase for WordCamp NYC 2012″
- Click on the link in the email.
- It should bring you to a ticket page with your personal info.
- Fill in the blanks and press SAVE.
- Go to the attendee page to see your smiling face!
I’m listed on the Attendee page, but there’s a mean-looking shape instead of my face!
Make sure you’re signed up with the same email address at gravatar.com.
We will also be placing the food order tomorrow, so unless you tell us otherwise, we will be assuming you are an omnivore (rather than vegetarian, vegan, or kosher eater).