August Seattle WordPress Meetup

A few weeks ago, we put out a call to get some help finding a venue for a meetup this month. With the help of a few members in the community, we have been able to organize something.

We are excited to announce that we will be starting once again to have WordPress meetups here in Seattle. Did I mention that we are very excited about it.

The August Seattle WordPress meetup is scheduled for Wednesday, August 11 from 6:30 to 8:00 at StartPad in Seattle. The address is 811 First Avenue, Suite 480 Seattle, WA 98104. Free parking on the street after 6pm.

The purpose of this meetup is to just get people together that want to talk WordPress. We’ll announce more details as they come. We have every intention to meet monthly. See ya there!

WordPress Celebration Postponed

Hi folks,

We’re postponing the WordPress Celebration. I had big plans for it that haven’t worked out and rather than put together a half-baked event, I’ve decided to postpone it and make sure we get this thing done right.

If you’ve already made plans to be in Seattle, please let me know. If there’s interest, we can pick a location and do a tweetup-style meetup for WordPress folks.

Thanks for your patience and understanding.

- Cal (@calvinf)

Cancelled: WordPress Celebration Event on May 6, 2010

Cancelled: It is with regret that I inform you the WordPress Celebration event is being postponed. Important details fell through and rather than put on a half-baked event, we’ve decided to postpone and re-plan for a date later in the year. – Cal (5/1/2010)

WordCamp Seattle is putting on a WordPress Celebration event to allow you and everyone in the Seattle area who loves WordPress to celebrate it together.

This event is for anyone who blogs on WordPress, designs for WordPress, develops WordPress (or its plugins or themes), runs their business and website on WordPress, or loves it for any other reason. If you don’t know what WordPress is or haven’t used it yourself, come anyway and ask other people why they use it and what they think.

The event will take place the evening of Thursday, May 6. Venue details are still being finalized, but we wanted to give you advance notice so you can plan to come. We’re planning to provide food and drinks at the event, a short talk, WordPress site demos, and more importantly a chance for you to meet and mingle.

Hope to see you there! We’ll post on the blog and on Twitter more details as they come. Follow WordCamp Seattle on Twitter here.

Chris Pirillo: Community

There is nobody who knows more about building an online community than Seattle’s very own Chris Pirillo. Chris talks about how to work effectively with them. We received lots of good feedback from those who attended WordCamp Seattle. Thanks Chris!

Below is the video of him speaking at WordCamp Seattle (found on WordPress.tv) and his slide deck (found on slideshare.net).

Download video | View video on WordPress.tv

WordCamp Seattle Live stream

Stuck at home when all of your friends are at WordCamp? Check out the Live Stream of WordCamp Seattle

Post-WordCamp Meet up open to all

Bummed you couldn’t get ahold of one of those elusive WordCamp Seattle tickets. Want to meet some of the speakers and participants that you have seen on the livestream http://live.blazestreaming.com/wcsea/?

Here is your chance!

The post-camp meetup is scheduled for The Ballroom in Fremont, which is just blocks from the Adobe building:

The Ballroom
456 N 36th St
Seattle, WA 98103-8631
(206) 634-2575

We have a reservation starting at 6pm, with no set ending time. Pizza will be provided and it there will be a no-host bar. Laura Fitton of 140.com will be there to answer your Twitter questions.

WordCamp is Today!

It’s just after midnight Pacific Time which means WordCamp Seattle 2009 is today!

If you have questions about parking, please check our FAQ: http://www.wordcampseattle.com/faq/

Be sure to view the agenda if you haven’t had a chance to check it out, it’s been updated with the latest speaker information available.

Waitlist Update: We contacted a number of people on the wait list on Friday — if you have not yet heard from us, unfortunately we aren’t able to open any more seats. There may still be a few people who can’t make it to the event or who are looking to sell their tickets — please feel free to coordinate in the comments or on Twitter for anyone still looking to buy or sell a ticket. Due to time constraints we won’t be able to facilitate these transactions directly on late notice.

Thanks and I look forward to seeing you at the event!

Giving away 5 tickets at the Pre-Camp Meetup

Need tickets?

Then brush up on your WordPress Trivia facts and get creative with your name tag because we will be giving away 5 tickets to WordCamp Seattle at the Pre-Camp Meetup.  Everyone is welcome at the Pre-Camp Meetup so invite all your friends that love WordPress as much as you do.

We’ll be getting starting at 7pm with six tables of free pool and a WordPress Trivia Challenge.  All evening long, meet our speakers and sponsors of WordCamp Seattle in an open forum while mingling with members of the WordPress community. And compete for cool prizes in our BYO-Name Tag competition.  Most creative name tag wins!

See you there!

Jillian’s Billiards – 731 Westlake Ave. North, Seattle, WA – We’ll be upstairs

Friday Sept 25th @ 7PM


If You Can’t Attend WordCamp Seattle

What to do if you can’t attend WordCamp Seattle:

If you have already purchased a ticket…
Please consider donating your ticket to somebody on the wait list. Please email us (contact form) to let us know and we’ll make sure somebody on the wait list gets in. Unfortunately, we do not have the resources necessary to refund tickets. I’m sure many people on the wait list would be willing to pay for a ticket and we can try to accommodate this, but payment will need to be handled between yourself and the other person.

If you do not have a ticket and are on the wait list…
If we have room for additional people due to ticket-holders not being able to attend the event, we will contact you by email this week to let you know.

Additional WordCamp Weekend activities
We will be having a pre-party at Jillian’s (Friday, 9/25, 7:00 PM) and an after-party following the event (Saturday, 9/26). The pre-party and after-party will be open to anyone!

Ignite at WordCamp Seattle

We need your help selecting the speakers for one of the sessions for WordCamp Seattle. 6 speakers will give a presentation Ignite WordCamp Seattle. Each presentation will be 20 slides that auto-advance every 15 seconds. Select the 6 presentations you would like to hear at this year’s WordCamp Seattle.

Click Here to Cast Your Vote

The following topics have been submitted:

  1. Create Your Own WordPress Theme in Five Minutes – Donald DeSantis

    Learn to create a personalized theme for your WordPress blog. In an action packed five minutes, we’ll review the structure of a WordPress theme, export graphics from a Photoshop design, and assemble our blog with little to no coding. I’ll post all of the files used during the session on my website for your download and review. Creating your own WordPress theme isn’t hard. And as we’ll see, it doesn’t take long either.

  2. Fixing WordPress Search for CMS Applications – Eric Amundson

    Quickly make WordPress search more robust and relevant using Relevanssi, a WP plugin, plus some easy code.

  3. The Untimely Demise of the Webmaster, a Historical Journey, as Told by Stephen Colbert – Mark McLaren

    Told in the voice of Stephen Colbert. At one time, the mighty webmaster had complete control over his domain. Nothing could happen on a website without his (or her) consent. But WordPress has made much of what they used to do unnecessary. Told as a bitter lament, this story will show how WordPress has helped to “democratize” the Web by giving everyone the ability to do things only webmasters understood: like creating a static home page with what used to be “blogging” software, adding a custom header, editing posts and pages, inserting media, customizing a sidebar, adding even more features using plugins, and customizing the look and feel with themes.

  4. Finding the perfect theme for you or your business – Chris Molitor

    With all the hundreds of thousands of WordPress themes out there, how are you suppose to know which one you should use? Should you use a free theme? Should you buy one? What are the advantages or disadvantages to purchasing a theme? What are the advantages or disadvantages to using a free theme? I’ll help you answer all these questions and more, as well as give you some great resources for finding the perfect WordPress theme for you or your business.

  5. Self-hosting multiple WordPress blogs: my experience, tips and tricks – Evil ZEN Scientist

    I self host about a dozen WordPress blogs – for family, friends and my own ramblings. In this session I’ll cover some of my experience about keeping on top of the multiple layers of security, patching and change control – and some of my thoughts on how this can help others.

  6. Keeping the Lawyers at Bay: How to Avoid Unwanted Attention to your Blog – John Grant

    Free advice on how to stay out of trouble as a blogger and dispel a lot of legal myths. Learn how to protect yourself, your work, and how to blow a whistle without a backfire.

  7. 5 Free Ways to Bulletproof Your WordPress Site – Eric Amundson

    Using free and open source tools to quickly and easily test your site for usability and accessibility.

  8. WordPress and the Social Web – Mark McLaren

    Technology like WordPress makes the social web possible. I will give a brief tour of the transformation that has taken place in online (and mobile) communication over the past 5-6 years. One of the best examples of this transformation is the move from the frozen-solid, wall-like brochure-ware website to the fluid, state-of-the-art WordPress site. Communication today takes place on many different platforms in real time. WordPress is keeping pace with all these changes. The social web is about listening and responding to your community, and that’s what WordPress does.

  9. wp-config Tips and Tricks – Josh Harrison

    Just by adding some configuration settings, you can improve the functionality, performance, and security of your WordPress-powered site. The wp-config file is a simple file, but it provides users with a way to customize their WordPress installs. Using real-world use cases, you’ll see some useful tips and tricks that don’t take a lot of time to add. You’ll wish you would have known these long ago!

Click Here to Cast Your Vote

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