Author Archives: skarjune

About skarjune

Skarjune was a former contributor on the Make WordPress.org Marketing team, WordPress.org,Training Team, and WordCamp Minneapolis—St.Paul organizing team. Skarjune resigned as Contributor in 2019 after disagreeing one-to-one with both Matt Mullenweg and Joost de Valk over their takeover of the Communications Team without consulting team members. Some members left in addition to the former Leader cast aside, and work by the Communications and Training team was discarded by new leaders . Hopefully, new real Governance will replace Automattic at WordPress.og, which is not WordPress.com. Commercial Corporations should respect Open Source GPL.

Solomon Scott

Solomon Scott Interview

Solomon Scott
Solomon Scott is speaking on JavaScript <3 WordPress at WordCamp Minneapolis.

What inspired or motivated you to give this talk at WordCamp?

I wanted to to help people understand JavaScript and not be so scared of it. It’s a powerful language. I jumped in head first when I started learning it and haven’t looked back since. I also want to make sure others understand the importance of clean, readable code.

How do you “create intention” in your job, career, or life?

I try to think about what makes me happy, and usually the answer is helping others, learning and experiencing new things. I strive to continue learning anything I’m interested in and then teaching it to others. I’m always reading a book or a blog on a language or new framework or just some new development idea/technique. I also love going to new places and meeting people. I’ve actually set a goal for myself to go to a new place whether in or out of the states each year. (2017 is the year of Costa Rica)

If you were a WordPress Plugin, what Plugin would you be and why?

I would probably be the WP Rest API plugin. Mostly because I use it often and I love how flexible and powerful it is.

If you were not doing your current job, what profession would you be in and why?

I would either be a Movie Critic or a Marine Biologist. (I know very different fields)

What professional and/or research resource(s) can’t you live without?

I need scotch.io and webdesignerdepot.com. I also can’t live without Amazon to buy all the books I need.

Andrew Norcross

Andrew Norcross Interview

Andrew Norcross
Andrew Norcross is speaking on Build Something Today at WordCamp Minneapolis.

What inspired or motivated you to give this talk at WordCamp?

Minneapolis has always been a city I’ve enjoyed visiting, and the people there have always supported the WordCamp events in Florida that I’ve been a part of. In addition, seeing the theme of this camp in particular caught my attention as it’s something new, and I wanted to be a part of it.

How do you “create intention” in your job, career, or life?

By focusing on the things I truly care about, and letting the rest take a backseat. So many things fight for your time and attention, and without being a real gatekeeper to your own time you simply cannot dedicate yourself to anything.

If you were a WordPress Plugin, what Plugin would you be and why?

Probably WordPress FAQ Manager, because I seem to have an endless amount of useless facts stored in my head.

If you were not doing your current job, what profession would you be in and why?

LEGO Master Builder. Even if I wasn’t getting paid, I’d probably figure out a way to do that.

What professional and/or research resource(s) can’t you live without?

My network of friends. There’s simply so much information out there you can’t keep up if you tried, but having a close group of people you know and trust allows you to filter through it and find the things that are relevant.

Aaron Holbrook

Aaron Holbrook Interview

Aaron Holbrook
Aaron Holbrook is speaking on Do you really need OOP? at WordCamp Minneapolis.

What inspired or motivated you to give this talk at WordCamp?

I strive to write simple, easy to understand code. I’ve experienced and maintained codebases that made it very difficult to follow what was going on. Classes and OOP in general create a ‘side effect’ type application, where, without running the code and stepping through it, it’s very difficult to know what is happening in the code at any given point.Reducing utilization of OOP makes following and debugging your code much easier, and in most cases with what is being done in our use cases (building websites and web applications that utilize WordPress), it isn’t that necessary.

If you were not doing your current job, what profession would you be in and why?

I really like making things with my hands and have recently taken up woodworking as a hobby. I would love to do something like that if it were economically feasible.

What professional and/or research resource(s) can’t you live without?

I thoroughly appreciate stack overflow (so much better then the previous q&a site that used to dominate search results). I don’t know if I couldn’t live without it, but the finely curated questions and answers, along with comments and user ratings help me find answers to questions others have had.

Tyler Golberg

Tyler Golberg Interview

Tyler Golberg
Tyler Golberg is speaking on Custom Post Types for Non-Developers at WordCamp Minneapolis.

What inspired or motivated you to give this talk at WordCamp?

My first WordCamp made a big impact on my career and I’d like to give back to the community.

How do you “create intention” in your job, career, or life?

For me, it’s all about finding a little quiet time each week to reflect.

If you were a WordPress Plugin, what Plugin would you be and why?

Jack of Trades – Aggressively mediocre at doing a little big of everything

If you were not doing your current job, what profession would you be in and why?

Commodity Trader. It’s my other venture and I’ve always been fascinated with economics.

What professional and/or research resource(s) can’t you live without?

Chris Lema

Jeremy Ward

Jeremy Ward Interview

What inspired or motivated you to give this talk at WordCamp?

Working as a WordPress Developer for an interactive agency, I get to build a lot of beautifully designed websites. Over time I have worked on enough of these types of projects that I’ve started to notice sections of themes that I seem to create over and over—big hero images with calls to action, accordions, image carousels, multi-column block layouts, email signup forms—the list goes on and on. Often, decisions are made to include these content sections during the design process, and by the time the project moves to development, we don’t have a lot of context as to what these components should have and what they need to do.

My goals for this presentation are two-fold: First, I want to start a conversation between all project stakeholders (designers, developers, information architects, UX designers, quality auditors, sales staff, project managers) about the importance of developing a patterns library to quickly implement commonly repeated components, and establishing a shared language to talk about them so clients get a unified experience all the way through a project. Second, I want to demonstrate what modular design looks like in a WordPress context and how these theories can be incorporated into real-world projects. I’m inspired by the possibility of helping others think a little differently about how they approach their WordPress projects.

How do you “create intention” in your job, career, or life?

I’m constantly asking myself if what I’m doing is the best it can be. Am I missing information or skills that I need to learn in order to complete a project? Was the code I wrote easy to read and understand? Did I leave comments so someone else down the road (possibly myself) can pick up where I left off and feel like they understand how the application works? If not, I evaluate where those improvements can be made and make an effort to learn from my mistakes so that that project and the next ones can be better than the ones before them.

If you were a WordPress Plugin, what Plugin would you be and why?

I’d be Regenerate Thumbnails by Alex Mills. I’m constantly learning new information and skills and need to update the “old me” to adapt to new projects.

If you were not doing your current job, what profession would you be in and why?

It took me over 30 years to realize how much I enjoy writing code, so I can’t imagine doing anything else!

What professional and/or research resource(s) can’t you live without?

Feedly and Slack/IRC. The former for aggregating news sources so I can quickly soak up new information in one visit, the latter for connecting with my team at 3five and other developers in the industry so we can get to know each other, laugh, make plans, and have fun.