WordCamp Europe 2015 is tomorrow – important information

Dearest WordCampers,

The third WordCamp Europe is tomorrow. The hashtag is #WCEU.  This is the information you need:

Location

Map: Barceló Sevilla Renacimiento, Convention center

Address: Avenida Álvaro Alonso Barba, s/n
41092 Sevilla

Registration

Registration opens at 8:15 and will last for an hour. Please come on time and collect your badge so that we are all set for the opening remarks in 9:15. You don’t need to print out emails or confirmations. Just state your name at registration.

Speakers, sponsors, creative partners, media partners should get their badges at Special registration.

Coffee will be served from 8:30am till 9:00am and filter coffee will be available throughout the day.

We start at 9:15 sharp. 

Sessions

The sessions will take place in the Convention centre of the hotel, the halls for the two tracks are right next to each other and there will be schedules in front of each hall. Check the schedule to decide which talks you’re going to see. Please provide feedback for speakers in their personal pages on the website.

Breaks and lunch

Lunch starts at 12:40 in the back of the hotel, there will be direction signs and our volunteers will help you find it. Coffee, water and small snacks will be available during the short breaks.

Speed networking on Friday

Organised speed networking will happen at the 4.20pm break on Friday. If you want to participate, please come on time, so there’s enough time to get organised and get going.

Tribe meet ups all day Saturday

Tribe meet ups will happen all day Saturday in parallel to sessions. The format is very informal – you walk into a room and talk to like-minded people. They won’t be moderated and have a single person to get people who enjoy the same things together. Ask at registration and our wonderful volunteers will help you find your way around. You can also check the schedule for the tribe meet ups in the announcement post.

After party on Saturday

Join us on Saturday at 9:30pm for the WordCamp Europe After party in Club Puerto de Cuba (map).  There is organised transport from the conference venue starting at 9:00pm and running every 15 minutes until 23:00.

Contributor day on Sunday

WordCamp Europe Contributor day starts at 11am on Sunday and will take place in the Convention center of Barceló Sevilla Renacimiento, Convention center (our conference venue).

Please come on time and bring your laptop. Read more about contributor day and the contributor day workshops.  If you haven’t already, you can sign up to join.

Please be careful with the weather!

We might be joking about the temperatures in Seville, but we would like to very seriously ask you to not be reckless and be very aware of the weather. Please drink a lot of water at all times and wear sunscreen when you go out in the sun.

Water coolers will be available in the Foyers of the convention centre at all times. Sunscreen will be available for you to grab at registration at any time of the day.

Orange is the new red

The organising team and all the volunteers will wear bright orange t-shirts so you can spot them easily. Please don’t hesitate to approach us with any questions.

Have a great WordCamp!

Love,
The organising team

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Speaker highlights: Zé Fontainhas and the history of WordCamp Europe

The third WordCamp Europe in the history of the world starts on Friday with Zé Fontainhas’ talk on the history of WordCamp Europe. And today, in the last speaker highlight before the event, we would like you to meet 

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 is a long-time WordPress contributor, WordCamp and meet up organiser and community leader. He’s been an active member of the global WordPress community for the last 10 years, helping contributors from all over the world translate the software in more than 140 languages. Zé is a true Polyglot (speaks five languages proficiently) and a true European. He has spent the last few years working towards creating ties between the European WordPress communities. He led the original WordCamp Europe organising team in 2013 in Leiden and has been a personal inspiration and a mentor for many contributors since. 

It was an honour to get to know him better during this interview. I hope you enjoy learning about how he started with WordPress, how he got to contribute, and how the idea of WordCamp Europe was born. 


 

I’m guessing WordPress and you go a long way? How did you get started?

Well, I founded one of the very first web agencies in Lisbon, way back when. We worked almost exclusively with Microsoft stuff (ASP, SQL Server, IIS), and at some point we needed a simple internal communication tool. Enter WordPress-as-the-intranet. This was sometime in 2004 and the version was 1.2. I installed it, it worked fine, and I never gave it another thought.

Fast forward to 2006. I had left the agency by then and was working as an independent web developer. Of course the CMS question popped up again, right in the middle of a project that wasn’t going very well, precisely because of how much I had to fight the CMS. So I switched to WordPress and never looked back.

The first thing I noticed was that the Portuguese translation wasn’t very good, complete, or even maintained. Probably no more than 15% of it was translated, and it was old. Therefore, joining the (now defunct) polyglots mailing list was my next step.

When did the Portugal community get started?

Around that time. You have to understand that the “community” was just me and Américo Dias. Álvaro Góis was number 3 and then Nuno Morgadinho and Ana Aires and many more. Here’s the inception.

So you started contributing to the Portuguese translation. How did you go from there to leading the Polyglots team?

I applied to Automattic at some point, got in, and did a lot of work related to i18n, including support, forum moderator management, and so on (all for WordPress.com), all the while being lead for i18n on WordPress.org.

What are, in your opinion, the most important things that happened for Polyglots in the past few years? What are we still lacking?

Well, that they’re finally seen as daughters and sons of the same gods and not just a development footnote. I don’t think they’re lacking anything these days.

I’ve always been curious about your proficiency in so many languages. How did that happen?

Random life accidents, mostly. First was English: I must’ve been 8 and my mom insisted we go play twice a week with friends of ours, whose mom was English. There was only one rule, which was that we could do whatever we wanted but only in English. So, I got used to it. Never again did I pay attention in English class.

Then we moved to Belgium. Despite the fact that I had consistently flunked French before, I seem to have adapted extremely quickly to the language, just in a few months. Also consider that we are 3 brothers and a sister. In those days, before the end of the first year, we already spoke French to each other exclusively (much to the annoyance of our parents) and kept on doing so for more that 20 years. My sister and I first spoke Portuguese to each other when I was 30 and had to laugh, it was so ridiculous.

From Belgium (and already an anglophile for some reason), where we also had to learn Dutch, we moved to Austria: English school for me, French school for the two younger ones. After a year or so despite having consistently flunked German in Belgium (can you detect a pattern?), I suddenly found out I could actually speak German for some reason. This in turn meant that I couldn’t speak Dutch anymore, they’re too close for me. I can read and understand conversations just fine, but when I open my mouth to speak Dutch, German comes out every time.

Then I came back to Portugal, married an American, had a daughter, and the rest is history. And no, I have no idea why I speak Spanish. I just do.

Do you think speaking languages helped you with your work in Polyglots?

Of course, but not because of the languages themselves: I can’t learn a language without soaking the whole context in – see Belgium, Austria. It gives you a multitude of perspectives.

What’s the most important thing one needs to consider when working with Polyglots?

It’s like diplomacy. You really really really need to be able to listen. Especially when the other person’s culture, vocabulary or background seems to clash with your idea of a civilized conversation. Different cultures have different ways of dealing with manners, schedules, social rituals and so on. It’s not always easy to make sure you’re weighing all that in in a conversation. Of course you need endless patience to deal with everyone who’s not a polyglot involved in i18n.

Tell me a bit about how WordPress Europe came to be? How did you start going to WordCamps outside of Portugal?

Well, it started while I was at Automattic. I seemed to be the natural presence in non-English WordCamps, ambassador of sorts.

When was the idea of WordCamp Europe born?

It had occurred to me and I may have discussed with very few people around 2011 or even as early as 2010. At some WordCamp NL I got to talking with Remkus, and we discovered that we had the same idea. We pitched the idea informally for a bit, and then more formally at the Tybee Community Summit.

Why did you think WordCamp Europe was necessary? As WordCamps are supposed to be local events, how did you decide a pan-continental event would be a good idea?

Because whether we like it or not, Europe is an idea, and it was all over the place at the time, fragmented. No one was talking to anybody else. Germany was doing its own thing, as was France and everybody else. It seemed stupid to travel from Europe to San Francisco (which is clearly not a local event), when we could have a more relevant and significant experience right here. At that time not that many people were travelling to WordCamps, surely not as many as today, and I think WordCamp Europe 2013 is in part responsible for that.

What are the main things WCEU 2013 changed for the European community?

Talking to each other. Suddenly realising the amount and size of projects going on and the amount of skills available. Even finding out that some people who you admire are actually European. A sense of communion, an extension of the whole Erasmus program spirit maybe.

The WordCamp Europe 2013 team

The WordCamp Europe 2013 team

Looking at the third WordCamp Europe in 2015, what would you like to see this year? What should the next goal of WCEU be? To ask in a different way: how should the idea grow?

It’s growing just fine, it seems. Maybe have some other more informal get-togethers, like the defunct WP on Tour. It was supposed to be a co-working week for WordPress people, but it happened just once. And it was also partly responsible for growing the whole WordCamp Europe idea. This was at the end of 2011, but really gained momentum with WP Realm. That was its first physical manifestation. The WP Realm announcement for WordCamp Europe 2013  actually explains a lot.

The WP on Tour crew

The WP on Tour crew

Your WordCamp Europe talk is on the history of WordCamp Europe. What can people expect?

It has two parts.

First one is how the WordCamp came to happen, all that happened before, the conversations, the setbacks, the doubts. Stuff which mostly happened while by myself, then WordCaml NL 2011, then WP On Tour, then Tybee, then several other city WordCamps in Europe.

It’ll include the days of WordCamp Europe 2013 themselves and the main conclusions we’ve drawn after that. Taking those conclusions, I’ll offer a personal take on community building in Europe, which has literally exploded after WordCamp Europe 2013. It is wholly personal and is probably a longer take on this post on my blog. I hope to leave some pointers as to what shaping a community from scratch could look like, be it a big one like the European WordPress community or a smaller one.

Zé’s talk How WordCamp Europe Came to Be is on Friday, June 26th, at 9:30am. Don’t miss the opportunity to get his personal take on the event that brought the European community together.

We’ll see you there! 

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Introducing the Experts Bar at WCEU 2015

We’re thrilled to announce that WordCamp Europe 2015 will feature an Experts Bar.

Think of the Experts Bar as a magical place where all your questions about WordPress will be answered by industry specialists.

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Starting from design, engineering, or hosting and ranging to topics like how to organise your own WordCamps, fashion and dating advice, and even Game Of Thrones characters mourning therapy, you can expect it all from our panel of experts.

The Bar will open on Friday morning and will be there through both days of the conference. You will be able to meet and talk to members of the core team, developers, hosting specialists and designers.

I know you’re already excited, but there’s more.

After their talks, a lot of our speakers will be joining the Experts Bar for an hour of geeking out.

Questions are welcomed in English, Spanish and Andalú 😉

Whether you have questions or you just want to chit-chat, don’t hesitate to say hi to our panel of know-it-alls.


Estamos encantados de anunciar que WordCamp Europe 2015 contará con una Barra de Expertos!

Imagina que la Barra de Expertos es un lugar mágico donde todas tus preguntas serán respondidas por especialistas de WordPress.
Si tienes cualquier pregunta sobre diseño, ingeniería, hosting, o incluso cómo organizar una WordCamp, consejos de moda y citas, e incluso terapia de duelo por los personajes de Juego de Tronos, puedes esperar todo de nuestra zona de expertos.

La barra estará abierta viernes y sábado, y contará con miembros del núcleo, desarrolladores, especialistas de hosting y diseñadores. Y eso no es todo. Después de sus presentaciones, muchos de nuestros ponentes se unirán a la Barra de Expertos por una hora de geeking out.

Tus preguntas serán bienvenidas en Inglés, Español y Andalú 😉

Si tienes preguntas o si solo quieres charlar, no dudes en saludar nuestra zona de sabelotodos.

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Providing Feedback for Speakers

One of the things that speakers often request is a mechanism for providing feedback on their talk. This year we’re going to experiment with our website to see if we can make that happen. Every speaker has their own bio on the website. After a speaker has presented, we invite you to leave a comment on their bio to provide the speaker with feedback. If the speaker has said that they would like to receive feedback, you’ll find comments switched on on their bio.

To leave feedback for a speaker, find them on the speaker page, click their name, and leave a comment for them.

Providing Useful Feedback

Feedback helps speakers to improve their future presentations, so please leave feedback that is helpful and constructive. For example:

  • did you enjoy a speaker’s presentation style?
  • did they talk too fast? Too slowly? Too quietly?
  • was there something in particular that you learned?
  • tell a speaker about a piece of advice you found particularly useful
  • let them know what you would have liked to hear more about
  • was there anything technically incorrect?

Feedback should meet the WordCamp code of conduct. Comments that are abusive or non-constructive will be moderated.

 

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Let’s party – join us for the WordCamp Europe official after-party

After two intense conference days, we will all deserve a drink! Join us for the WordCamp Europe 2015 official after party!

Saturday, June 27th, starting at 9:30pm

We’ve chosen an open air venue so you can fully experience the magic of night life in Seville. The club is called Puerto de Cuba and will have a place for both fun and dancing, and talking and relaxing.

We have exclusive use of the venue until midnight, but it’s open until the early hours of the morning and contributor day doesn’t start until 11am on Sunday: it’s a great opportunity to let your hair down and hang out with your WordCamp compadres.

http://www.puertodecubasevilla.com/

http://www.puertodecubasevilla.com/

 Getting there

There are organised buses from the conference venue to the after party starting at 21:00 and running every 15 minutes until 23:00. The places on the bus will be on a first-come-first-served basis.

Address

Puerto de Cuba
Calle Betis, s/n
41010 Sevilla
Spain

Foursquare venue | Google location

Bring your badge!

 

Grab dinner before the party

We recommend that you grab some dinner before the after-party. There is a a great neighbourhood with lots of great places to eat a short 10 min walk from the conference venue.

Check out the WCEU official Foursquare lists for recommended places:

WCEU Restaurants recommendations | WCEU recommended veggie places

Or check out our most favourite places:

See you at the after-party!

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WordCamp Europe Creative Partners

We’re super excited to introduce WordCamp Europe 2015 creative partners – the people who are in charge of leaving a long lasting memory of our three days of wonder.

Studio Netting

We’d like you to meet Marte Johansen, Ida Kokkersvold and Kristin Kokkersvold – the lovely ladies from Studio Netting. They did the amazing sketch notes of sessions at WordCamp Europe 2014 and we fell in love with their work. We are pleased to announce that they’re coming back to WordCamp Europe 2015, this time as an official WordCamp Europe creative partner.

StudioNettingWCEUSketchnotes

You can expect a print-ready WCEU sketch summary like this one after the camp and we’re really looking forward to their sketch notes from different sessions.

VideoPartner

For the third year in a row Kaarel Veike and his amazing team are going to capture the spirit of WordCamp Europe in a post-event video. If you haven’t gotten a chance to see the 2013 and 2014 #wceu videos, check them out here:

We’re really happy to welcome VideoPartner as an official creative partner for 2015 and can’t wait to see them do their magic.

WordCamp Europe Photographers

There are so many talented photographers in the WordPress community! This year we get two professional photographers to lead our volunteer photographers team and you can expect amazing results.

We’re honoured to have Kari Leigh and  Iñaki Respaldiza as creative partners of WordCamp Europe 2015 taking care of photography.

Make sure you’re friendly and smile for the cameras!

A huge thank you to all of our creative partners! We hope you are as impatient for the results of their work as we are!

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Welcome GoDaddy, ManageWP and Insite by Duda as Author level sponsors!

We would like to say a huge “Thank you” to our author level sponsors Insite by Duda, ManageWP and GoDaddy! We really appreciate your support of WordCamp Europe.


Screenshot 2015-06-19 16.26.33inSites powered Dud are smart, personalized recipes that automatically CHANGE your website at pre determined TRIGGER points (such as Time, Location or Visits etc) to create a richer, more engaged and relevant visitor experience that drives greater conversion.


Screenshot 2015-06-19 16.26.43ManageWP has been conceived back in 2010 by a team of WordPress developers as the ultimate WordPress productivity tool for developers building and managing multiple WordPress websites. ManageWP is currently managing over a quarter of a million websites, helping developers to quickly and efficiently migrate websites, run backups, perform restores, monitor, maintain and optimize them, and a lot more.

The driving force behind this service is a dedicated team of over a dozen WordPress experts, contributors, WordCamp speakers, organizers – overall a fun bunch of people.


Screenshot 2015-06-19 16.26.54GoDaddy’s mission is to radically shift the global economy toward small businesses by empowering people to easily start, confidently grow and successfully run their own ventures. With more than 12 million customers worldwide and 57 million domain names under management, GoDaddy gives small business owners the tools to name their idea, build a beautiful online presence, attract customers and manage their business.

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How to use a city bike in Seville

A-sevici-station-for-the-bike-share-program.-There-are-250-throughout-Seville-2

 

Welcome to Sevilla! There are many ways to get around town, some of which you can check in this post. But it’s summer and bikes are one of the most fun and easy way to get around. Seville has a public bike service you can all take advantage of! So here is how you can use it.

There are two ways, short and long-term.

If you are here for the WordCamp Europe it’s probably easier to invest in a 7-day short-term Sevici pass. A long-term card is about 34 euros for a year.

To use the Sevici with a short-term code you need to:

  • Find an available Sevici bike obviously… And check the machine nearby.
  • You need your credit card, and the machine is going to charge you 13-14 euros plus the right to withdraw 150 euros. I actually don’t think they withdraw the 150 as a deposit. Instead they preserve the right to withdraw them in case you should choose to eat the bike or something… First 30 minutes are free, after those 30 minutes, you will be charged 1 euro per hour.
  • Follow the instructions to get a short-term code. You’ll probably need to enter a pin code.
  • Now that you have your card, you’re ready to get your famous Sevici bike.

So, follow the instructions on the screen to get a bike, which is done through the menu in Spanish “retirar una bicicleta” which is Spanish for WordCamp Europe Rocks 😉

Choose your favourite iron horse and off you go…

Next time you need a ride you only have to repeat the last step. As easy as saying “dos cervezas”. Enjoy the ride!

Read more here: https://abo-seville.cyclocity.fr/Abonate/Abono-de-Corta-Duracion

And this map with all the Sevici stations: https://abo-seville.cyclocity.fr/Estaciones/Mapa

Enjoy Sevilla!

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Schedule changes for WordCamp Europe 2015

We have two schedule changes to announce today and two new WordCamp Europe 2015 speakers!

heathernikolay

Unfortunately Facebook’s Sara Golemon can not make the conference this year.

Her talk slot on HHVM will be filled by a talk on WordPress security delivered by Nikolay Bachiyski – a long time WordPress core contributor and currently heads developer experience at Automattic. 

Nikolay’s talk “A Few WordPress Security Principles” aims at providing comprehensive general security guidelines backed with a lot of examples from WordPress’ history. 

Due to health issues SiteGround’s Liliyana Yakimova will not be able to come to Seville.

We’re excited to announce that Heather Burns is joining the WordCamp Europe 2015 speaker line up to take Lili’s slot in the afternoon of day one of the conference.

Catch Heather’s talk European Web Law Developments: What You Need to Know” at 5:30pm on Friday.

Heather Burns is a web site designer and digital law specialist in Glasgow, Scotland. She has been designing web sites since logging on to a dialup UNIX system in 1997 and has been working with WordPress since 2008.

See the full updated schedule of the event: https://2015.europe.wordcamp.org/schedule/

Coming close to the event all important announcements will be published on our social media channels, so make sure you follow WordCamp Europe on TwitterFacebook and Google +

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Announcing the #WCEU Live stream – watch sessions live wherever you are

We know you’re probably really sad you can’t make WordCamp Europe 2015 this year. Well we’ve got some good news! WordCamp Europe will be live streamed to anyone who wants to watch sessions.

The live stream is free, but we do ask that you register.  You can sign up for a ticket here, even during the event.

WordCamp Europe Live Stream

 

There will be separate streaming for the two tracks of the event. We strongly advise that you test your stream before the event. We’ll email you with details of how to do that before the start of the conference.

Support requests should be emailed to livestream at wp-europe.org.

Once again, sign up for a free ticket and happy streaming!

Love,
The Organising team

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