Interview with Brennen Byrne

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Brennen will be presenting Passwords: The Weakest Link in WordPress Security on  Saturday in the Development track

Brennen is the cofounder and CEO of Clef (getclef.com), a replacement for usernames and passwords online. His focus is on making advanced technology accessible to anyone and applying it to everyday use cases. Clef relies on public key cryptography, a standard which developers and security experts have used for years, but is wrapped in a mobile app that makes logging in faster and easier than ever.

Brennen and his team launched Clef in June of 2013, and has grown to power logins on more than 2,500 sites around the web. The New York times described logging in with Clef as “magical” and has been recommended by security experts around the web. After leading the Petition Against Passwords in 2013, Clef has been at the center of the global conversation about the next generation of online security.

Active in the WordPress community, Brennen has spoken about security at WordCamps across the country from Phoenix to Buffalo.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
I use WordPress because of the community behind it. There is a lot of software that can be used to build sites on the web, but WordPress has become the strongest offering by being inclusive. The result is a platform that is flexible and well supported.

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
You can’t really evaluate WordPress without understanding the community, and WordCamps are the best place to come face to face with a big cross-section of the community. In so many ways, WordPress is the WordCamps.

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
I spend all of my time working on Clef, so I really don’t have an option on this one.

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
Ask for help! There are so many wonderful people who would love to talk to you about the ins and outs of working with WordPress and all you have to do is ask. In many parts of life, people are guarded and secretive, but in WordPress, everyone is willing to help.

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
The WordCamps.

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
I used to be a developer and write a blog called post-technical about the lessons I’ve learned moving from a technical to a business role. There are a lot of exciting opportunities for developers in the world right now, but the technology industry needs people of all different backgrounds to power the next generation of innovation.

Interview with Hilary Fosdal

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Hilary will be presenting No Regrets Web Design on Saturday in the Design track

Hilary Fosdal is the founder of Bring Your Own Stuff. She also serves as the Digital Strategist at the Better Government Association (BGA).

Prior to joining the BGA, Hilary was the digital managing editor for the Chicago-based Cumulus Radio stations WLS AM and 94.7 FM. She earned her M.A. in journalism and mass communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

You can get to know her better online at http://hilaryfosdal.com.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
I use WordPress because it is as powerful a content management system as it is simple to use. I appreciate the a la carte system of use what you want and strip away what you don’t need. You can have ten plug-ins or none at all.

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
Network. Learn. Seek new opportunities. If you’re looking to do any of those things professionally and are in any way connected to the web design and development field you would be doing yourself a disservice not to attend.

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
I recently launched a blog for Bring Your Own Stuff at blog.byostuff.com using WordPress. The purpose of the blog is to help business owners hire the right web designer or agency for their website project.

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
Do it. Plenty of people set up shop everyday. But there is no shortage of outstanding WordPress designers and developers. Be what the market needs.

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
I find most of my WordPress questions are answered by using search engines.

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
I’ve hitchhiked, backpacked and traveled across six continents and over 50 countries. If I had to recommend one place that everyone must see it would be a close tie between Ecuador and Tibet.

Interview with Dan Beil

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Dan will be presenting How NOT to develop (With WordPress) on Saturday in the Business/Project Management track

Dan has been a theme developer for the past 5 years, specializing in custom WordPress builds to address specific requirements. Recently Dan has joined the Alley Interactive team and works remotely from Minneapolis, MN.

In his “free” time he fosters Siberian Huskies and sometimes contributes to opensource WordPress projects on GitHub.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
Because open source is awesome and the community is great. It also provides a ridiculous solid base for building more complex solutions which are still easy to use.

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
If you work with WordPress, attending a WordCamp is the best money you’ll ever spend!

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
Fostering Siberian Huskies is hard work

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
New VIP builds – super interesting and complicated 🙂

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
1: Network, 2: Attend WordCamps, 3: Repeat Steps 1 & 2

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
@jjj, @daljo628, @pippinsplugins, @alisothegeek

Interview with K. Adam White

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K. Adam will be presenting Modular JavaScript on Saturday in the Advanced Development track

K.Adam White is a JavaScript engineer at Bocoup, an Open Web technology company located in Boston, MA, where he builds web applications and evangelizes for the web as an open technology platform.

K.Adam has been a co-organizer of the Boston WordPress meetup since 2012, and has presented on WordPress and front-end development best practices at meetups and WordCamps across the country.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
I started a WordPress blog in college because I liked the look of the old “Typography” theme. Later, as an aimless recent graduate in the middle of an economic slump it was the WP community that gave me my first foothold in web design. I taught myself to code by helping a friend tweak WordPress themes for local businesses, and slowly began to take on my own freelance work.

Freelancing lead me to a great full-time job, where I left behind PHP but discovered jQuery and JavaScript – four years later I joined Bocoup, and finally got involved with core development. WordPress is the foundation of my career, and I’ve met some great friends through this community. I use it because I think it’s the best tool for what it does; I contribute because I am grateful; and I have a WP phone case just because I’m a big fan!

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
They’re among the highest-value conferences I’ve ever attended, for some of the lowest ticket prices: whether you’re a blogger, an artist, a designer, a front-end scripter, an expert PHP developer, or even a recovering technophobe, there will be talks to learn from and great people to meet.

Because users, designers and developers all attend, and are all equal in the eyes of the event, WordCamps are a great place to stretch your wings and learn something outside your comfort zone.

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
We’re in the process of building a site using WordPress through the JSON API plugin, and it’s really exciting to be proving out WP’s capacity to be a content platform for apps without a single line of client-facing template code!

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
Embrace the community! People have succeeded by “going it alone,” but 90% of the WordPress professionals I’ve met regularly get work from (or pass work along to) friends within the community.

Whether you can attend a WordCamp, start a local WordPress meetup, hang out in any of the WP-related IRC channels, or just keep an eye on Twitter and mailing list conversations, it pays to be visible and involved in the greater WP ecosystem.

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
Twitter. So many brilliant people in the community post links and share their knowledge on Twitter, it could be a full-time job keeping up on the flow of tips and new information.

I’ve got a couple TweetDeck columns devoted to different groups of WordPress community members; they’re my first stop if I have a question or want to see what’s new.

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
I can mix a mean cocktail, and despite living in Boston these days I used to be certified to bartend in Illinois – although I’m working on a drink recipe database that’s using WP for the back-end, so maybe that’s not actually a good answer to the question

Interview with Ben Lobaugh

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Ben will be presenting From Zero to WordPress Hero on Sunday in the General Interest track

Adventurous sailor and Seattle WordPress(Camp) organizer, Ben Lobaugh has been working with open source communities for 15-plus years and is an active contributor to the WordPress community. Ben currently works as a Jetpack Engineer with Automattic.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
I first installed WordPress because my homegrown blogging platform was neglected and I did not want to put forth the hours to get it where it needed to be, so I installed WordPress. As WordPress evolved it turned into something with awesome prebuilt structures I could easily hack on for new clients to get sites up and running fast. Nowadays WordPress can handle pretty much anything you can throw at it. With WordPress powering 22% of the interwebs there is no reason to switch away now!

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
BACON BAR!!!! But really, the WordPress community is full of amazing people. Coming to a WordCamp can really get you connected. People are so genuine and open that you are guaranteed to learn a ton and have a great time doing it. Have an obstacle you are trying to tackle? The community will band together to help you out no matter whether it is a user, developer, or business issue knowledge is freely and happily shared.

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
Jetpack! Besides being the only project I have worked on recently it is also a really powerful plugin that will offload resource usage to the WordPress.com infrastructure and free your server up to serve even more visitors!

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
The WordPress community is your friend. Get involved in a local meetup and start making connections. Follow and interact with well known WordPressers on Twitter and get involved with the WordPress project at http://make.wordpress.org. The community does a great job at helping people find work and even passing jobs around to each other.

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
Local meetup groups and Twitter. The WordPress world is very active on Twitter. Every question I have ever had has been answered quickly via Twitter and even disseminating news via Twitter is a great way to quickly get your message out there. Local meet ups are great places to share knowledge and make close bonds with the community.

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
On a whim 4 years ago I purchased a sailboat, the beautiful Zippety Doo Dah (http://ben.lobaugh.net/ship-log). I had never been sailing before but I thought sailing sound fun! For years later I am even more in love with sailing now that I ever have been. My intrepid sailing companion is my faithful wooden wrist watch. It has accompanied me on nearly all my sailing adventures and has been by my side when traveling all around the world.

Interview with Shanta Nathwani

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Shanta will be presenting WordPress 101 on Friday in the Foundation Friday 101 track

Shanta R. Nathwani is an IT and Social Media Consultant and an Instructor in Web Design and CCIT Capstone at Sheridan College, which includes teaching WordPress. The ICCIT program is a joint program with the University of Toronto at Mississauga.

She teaches students and small businesses how to use their websites and social media to increase their online presence leading to increased revenues and improved customer service. She has assisted companies to incorporate social media in the real estate, financial, non-profit, education and technical fields to name a few.

Shanta is a problem solver and it has been said she has the patience of a saint. She can explain even the most difficult concepts to the most basic user and has developed training documents that allow clients to learn for themselves. She thrives on understanding the needs of her clients. She believes in making social media as simple as possible and making it fun, which allows her clients to seamlessly incorporate it into their organization.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
WordPress is extremely easy to use, but can also be as complex as we need it to be. It truly levels the playing field and empowers people to take charge of their own online presence.

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
If you ever want to get into WordPress, this is the cheapest and most fun way to do it. Think of the wealth of knowledge that you have around you!

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
My own WordPress blog, Shanta.ca. It is constantly a work in progress and I love playing around with it. I also put together an alumni website for my high school, malverncollegiate.com. I use it regularly as a case study for small businesses and non-profit organizations.

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
Ask a lot of questions! there is a lot of information on WordPress out there.

The beauty about WordPress is that it is not a one size fits all, out-of-the-box solution. Everyone can use it, but you have to take the time and make it your own.

Lastly, make sure that you give back to the community. Attend Meetup’s and WordCamps as much as possible. Continue to grow your knowledge!

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
There are two plug-ins that I would install for any of my clients: WordFence and Backup Buddy.

WordFence helps protect against things like viruses and attacks on a WordPress site. It is the security plug-in. Backup Buddy does backups of your site automatically and it is also used as a migration tool.

Both are extremely easy to use and I teach my clients how to use them.

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
I’ve always been a teacher. The first thing I remember teaching was a module on India in my sixth grade class. After that I taught origami at Parks and Recreation at the age of 17. I’ve taught technology and even martial arts, which I’ve been doing for about 12 years.

Interview with Dre Armeda

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Dre will be presenting WordPress End User Security – Kill the Noise on Saturday in the Development track

Dre is US Navy veteran, and the CEO, Co-Founder of Sucuri Inc.

Dre is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu player, Harley enthusiast, and a Chargers fan. He wears many hats, and love tacos. He is infatuated with WordPress, web design, and web security. Dre hopes to make the internet a safer place!

Dre presents at various WordCamps and other events every year. Dre is a proud WordPress contributor and was the lead organizer that brought WordCamp to San Diego.

Dre is the Co-Host of the worlds favorite WordPress podcast,  which airs on Wednesday nights. Pressing all the words!

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
Same reason people breath air. 🙂

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
I would tell them it’s a conference of community, not just software. Build websites, and friendships.

Do you want to learn how to democratize publishing? Do you want to learn how to make the most amazing websites with free software? DO IT!

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
Our Sucuri plugin is my favorite 🙂

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
Partner with people that compliment your weaknesses. Don’t go at it alone. WordPress is more then software, it’s a community. Leverage that community!

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
DradCast!

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
I practice Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu under Carlson Gracie Team. I started a blog to catalog my journey

Interview with George Stephanis

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George will be presenting Moving your Plugin to GitHub: Trials, Tribulations, and Testing on Saturday in the Development track

George Stephanis works for Automattic (makers of WordPress.com) as Team Lead for the Jetpack Pit Crew, helping self-hosted WordPress sites take advantage of the WordPress.com cloud.

He is also a frequent core contributor to the WordPress open-source project, a community organizer, regularly presents at WordCamps, and guests on podcasts like the WPWatercooler and the WP Girlie Show.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
It’s free, both in speech and in beer. The ability of anyone to use WordPress as a fulcrum to launch their content into the world is a tremendous win for the open web and democratizing content across the world.

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
If you use WordPress, it’ll be one of your best weekends all year long. If you don’t use WordPress, come. You’ll be one of us soon enough. 🙂

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
Jetpack or Core. Either one will do.

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
I hear Google’s pretty awesome.

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
When not on the computer, I’m a bit of a luddite. I enjoy letterpress printing, carpentry, and pipes.

Interview with Aaron Campbell and Brian Krogsgard

Aaron and Brian will be presenting Do Big Things With A Small Team on Saturday in the Business/Project Management track along with Pete Mall and Sara Cannon.

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Aaron is CTO and a Partner at Range. Aaron has more than ten years of web development experience and has been a regular contributor to WordPress for the last five years.

He has experience writing quality code that is both fast and scalable, and has a knack for translating ideas and goals into functional sites. He’s been called both a coffee snob and a beer snob, but considers both to be compliments.

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Brian is a Junior Partner at Range, a boutique web development and design agency. Range is also a WordPress.com VIP development partner.

Brian also runs Post Status, a blog dedicated to news and resources for WordPress professionals and enthusiasts.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
Aaron: It’s flexible and extensible.

Brian: WordPress is powerful, flexible, and easy to use. I don’t know what else I would use.

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
Brian:  WordCamps are cheap and give direct access to some of the leaders in the WordPress community. It’s a great time to learn, but even better, a great time to get to know like-minded folks.

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
Aaron: The new Flickr blog has been fun. It hasn’t launched yet, but should have by the time the event happens.

Brian:  Ping me in a about a week 😉

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
Aaron: Work with the community not against it. It sounds so simple, and yet it makes a HUGE difference.

Brian: Follow those who are doing what you want to be doing, see how their doing it, and try to emulate it. Over time, you’ll develop your own styles and opinions.

Also, progress > process. Good processes are great. But don’t get overwhelmed by the new and shiny. This is the web and it evolves fast. Stay aware but don’t get distracted by tools. Re-think your process and tools when it’s smart, not when you first see them

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
Aaron: Honestly, it’s the code. That’s where I go to figure out most things.

Brian: Post Status, of course 🙂 I hope it’s yours too.

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
Brian: My wife and I have a Great Dane named Lucy May. She’s blue, big, and spoiled rotten. I’d say you should follow me on Instagram, but if you do, it’ll just be a bunch of pictures of her or the craft beers I’m enjoying at any particular time (typically quite hoppy varieties).

Interview with Aaron Jorbin

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Aaron will be presenting Color Theory for Web Developers on Saturday in the Design track

Aaron is a Polyhistoric man of the web. Currently Technical Architect on the Conde Nast Platform Team and a WordPress contributor, he works to improve developer happiness and is dedicated to making internet usable and enjoyable by everyone.

Interview:

Why do you use WordPress?
The GPL and the community.

What would you say to convince someone to attend a WordCamp?
WordCamps are some of the best value web conferences you can attend. Where as many other conferences cost a few hundred dollar, a WordCamp costs under $100 and features speakers just as interesting and informational.

What is your favorite WordPress project you have worked on recently?
https://github.com/aaronjorbin/grunt-patch-wordpress

Do you have any advice for someone looking to start or grow a WordPress based business?
Align yourself with the WordPress Philosophies. Make decisions, not options. Embrace the GPL.

What is your favorite WordPress-related resource?
The source code of WordPress.

Tell us something awesome about yourself that is not WordPress related
I spend my free time volunteering with American Model United Nations as a simulation director planning and running a multi-day simulation of the United Nations Security Council for college students.