Archive for category WordPress

Ignite WordCamp 2010 – Audio Only

10 Years After the Manifesto: The Cluetrain Stops at WordCamp – Audio Only

Although the 95 Theses of the Cluetrain Manifesto first appeared a decade ago, they still resonate just as much today as they did then. The quiet success of the book has been such that concepts like “markets are conversations,” “To speak with a human voice, companies must share the concerns of their communities” and “hyperlinks subvert hierarchy” seem commonplaces today, though they are concepts more often cited than practiced. Many bloggers owe a significant debt to Cluetrain, and far too many don’t even know it!

In this panel, two of the original authors of Cluetrain, Doc Searls and David Weinberger, will have a discussion with Scott Kirsner about the decade since the publication of Cluetrain.

What do they think Cluetrain got right, and what did it miss? Has blogging been hopelessly co-opted by exactly the forces of marketing against which the “people of earth” were said to be uniting? If the rest of the world is finally catching up to Cluetrain, what will the next steps in the evolution of commerce and conversation look like?

Get Thee Behind Me: Making BuddyPress Do Thy Bidding – Audio Only

With BuddyPress, you can build your own social network on top of WordPress in just a few minutes. But every community is unique (freakish?) in its own ways, and BuddyPress’s default setup won’t work for everyone. Sometimes you want more than the standard BuddyPress, sometimes you want less, and sometimes you want something that doesn’t look social networkish at all. In this session I’ll talk about the structure of BuddyPress and how the parts work together. Then I’ll demonstrate a few examples of how you can use plugins, config files, and child themes to make BuddyPress work for your unique and freakish purposes.

Presented by Boone Gorges
Presented at WordCamp Boston 2010

WordPress Powers My Startup – Audio Only

You’re flirting with WordPress, now meet some entrepreneurs who made a commitment. This panel features startup and small business leaders for whom WordPress is a critical part of their business operation. Why did they settle on WordPress? What challenges does that decision present? If they could start over, would they pick WordPress again?

Locals Juliet DeVries of Audissey Guides and Amy Katz of Nine Lives Media join m62 visualcommunication’s Joby Blume, stopping in on the way back to the UK. Moderated by Jake Goldman.

Presented at WordCamp Boston 2010

Sell Sh*t on WordPress – Audio Only

The makers of WP-eCommerce and Shopp introduce their e-commerce solutions, share examples of their plug-ins in practice, and take questions on eCommerce implementation from the audience. The session is split evenly between these two popular solutions.

Presented by Shayne Sanderson and Jonathan Davis.
Presented at WordCamp Boston 2010

Academia/Higher Ed in Practice – Audio Only

WordPress is taking off in Boston academia. Why are higher education institutions choosing it? What does it need to expand adoption in academia?

Bill Dennen of Wheaton College, Sean Brown from MIT Sloan Review, and Chris Traganos of Harvard University mull lessons learned from rolling out WP and WPMU in academia. Moderated by Scott Dasse of Boston University.

Presented at WordCamp Boston 2010

WordPress for Big Media – Audio Only

You’re sold on WordPress as a solution for the lone blogger and small businesses. But does it work for big media organizations? Ned Watson of 1080d.com has set up both internal and VIP hosting for companies like MTV and Time Inc. He’ll review big media use cases, hosting alternatives, integration with external platforms, and other lessons learned from rolling out WordPress at scale.

Presented by Ned Watson
Presented at WordCamp Boston 2010

Monetization In A Free World – Audio Only

There are 7,500+ free and open plug-ins and 1,000+ free/open themes on the official repository, all running on free and open WordPress. Is there real money to be made building plug-ins and templates?

Jane Wells of Automattic, Jousha Strebel of Page.ly, Carl Hancock of Gravity Forms (RocketGenius), and Brian Gardner of StudioPress explore (non-consulting) business models in a world of free, open, and GPL. Moderated by Jeff Chandler of WordPress Tavern.

Presented at WordCamp Boston 2010