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.

Eric Sherred Interview

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

I love digital strategy and find we talk about development so much at WordCamps we need more marketing discussions because of how awesome WordPress is ad making great websites for marketing.

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

I am very methodical in my thought process. But typically throw it all out and go with the flow once everything gets started. I like to be adaptable in any situation.

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

Yoast SEO, and not just because it’s my most used. It does so many different things and has so many different aspects to it that I relate as my life tends to be a mixture of many different pieces.

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

As silly as it is I think I’d end up back here somehow. I’ve tried to leave so many times and always end up back in it. But goals are to include Personal Trainer and SCUBA Instructor to the list within the next year or so.

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

GrowthHackers.com, Sean Ellis anything, and of course Google

Joe Dolson

Joe Dolson interview

Joe Dolson
Joe Dolson is speaking on Web Accessibility with JavaScript at WordCamp Minneapolis.

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

Client-side applications and JavaScript are an important piece of the future of WordPress. But using JavaScript can both create amazing accessible experiences or applications that are completely unusable by people with disabilities. Knowing how you can use JavaScript to create great, accessible applications is crucial for the future of web development.

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

Advocating for accessibility is an ongoing, constant intention. Having a socially positive motivation for all the work I do is an amazing way of being intentional about the choices I make.

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

WP Accessibility, obviously.

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

Before going into web development, I was working in academic libraries during the day and as a freelancing musician at night. I imagine that I would have continued on one or the other of those plans—but we’ll never know!

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

The internet. 😉

Don Betts

Don Betts Interview

Don Betts
Don Betts is speaking on Make It Look Pretty: Why We Need Beautiful Websites at WordCamp Minneapolis.

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

Years trying to figure out what makes something beautiful, and wondering if pre-enlightenment concepts of beauty could help graphic and web designers do their work well. Also, I’m worried that the focus on speed and mobile first in web design will mean a loss of images in web design and a move to pure text-based knowledge.

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

By constantly asking “Why?” about every choice and decision. It’s exhausting and takes longer to get anything done.

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

A plugin that asks the user, “Why the hell are you doing that?” whenever they install a new plugin or theme.

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

Travelling preacher who solves crimes in his spare time.

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

codex.wordpress.org, wordpress.stackexchange.com, stackoverflow.com, trello, kanboard.net

Pete Nelson

Pete Nelson Interview

Pete Nelson
Pete Nelson is speaking on Advanced Permalinks in WordPress at WordCamp Minneapolis.

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

A site we recently launched for a client had a very complex permalinks structure and I ended up learning quite a bit about permalinks and rewrites on that project.

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

Probably something where I would be building things, like woodworking or welding.

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

The WordPress codex

Steve Persch

Steve Persch Interview

Steve Persch
Steve Persch is speaking on Why your site is slow at WordCamp Minneapolis.

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

I want to move the web development community beyond a checklist mentality when it comes to web performance. Focusing on the technical checklists often obscures underlying problems that result in slow sites.

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

I perform with an improv company called Comedy Sportz and we have a game called “What are you doing?” In that game, the question is always answered with something other than what you are actually doing. In normal life and work I often ask myself that question too. I may want the answer to be “writing code to get a test passing” but the answer might actually be “checking email while tracking three Slack rooms.”

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

WordPress GitHub Sync. Years ago I rebuilt my blog in Jekyll (and now again in WordPress with GitHub Sync) because I love the idea that anything (content as well as code) can be improved by anyone with a pull request.

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

I got in to web development because I was working at a theatre company that needed a blog. I made a WordPress site and just kept digging deeper, thinking I might eventually hit bottom and come back up to working in theatre. Now it seems more likely that I’d take my coding experience to the data journalism community.

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

I have gotten hooked on PHPStorm recently. Compared to simpler text editors it makes navigating multiple files so easy. Learning a codebase gets much faster.