Save the date! Join us for the #WCEUBall on Saturday, June 25th at Halle E+G!

After parties, socials, gatherings, meetups, the after hours social events at WordCamp Europe have always had one purpose – get together, have fun, chat, relax and make friends and a lot of memories.

This year, with the help of our awesome after party sponsors SiteGround and Hover, we have something special planned for you all.

Welcome to the WordCamp Europe Ball

wceu16_photo-wall-rev2-E-dark


Ladies and gentleman of the WordPress world, pack your dresses, shirts & bow ties and join us on Saturday, June 25th, at 8:30 pm for the WordCamp Europe Ball in Halle E at the MuseumQuartier.


Continue reading Save the date! Join us for the #WCEUBall on Saturday, June 25th at Halle E+G!

Don’t miss the #WCEU focused track on WordPress Development for beginners

For the first time this year, WordCamp Europe will have more than two tracks. With the conference expanding almost twice since 2015, we decided to add more content and most of all – experiment with formats and topics.

Our third track is going to be in the beautiful Leopold Museum, just a 2 min walk from Halle E+G and it will host all our networking activities (link), three highly targeted, focused content tracks (development, business, and community) and for the first time for an event of this side – unconference (more information coming in the next few days).

Today we’d like to introduce the third and final of our three focused tracks: “WordPress Development for Beginners”. The speakers in this focused track are successful developers with tons of experience in all areas of WordPress. They’ll get you familiar with some important concepts in WordPress development – from theme and plugin development to setting up your dev environment and working with Multisite.

Please welcome Marcos Schratzenstaller, Jeremy Felt, Edmund Turbin, Aaron Campbell, Matt Geri and Ulrich Pogson. 

Marcos Schratzenstaller

Working at Rainmaker Digital as a SysAdmin focused on WordPress hosting, Marcos is a System administrator focused on WordPress hosting, developer in languages: Python, Bash, PHP, C/C++, Informix 4GL, Java, HTML, JavaScript, C#, Visual C++ (with large experience in this field) with large knowledge in databases (SQL and No-SQL).

WP-CLI for beginners


Jeremy Felt

Jeremy is a senior WordPress engineer with University Communications at Washington State University, where he helps power the web on an open source, multi-network, multisite platform.

He describes himself as an Open Source Student. Is a WordPress core committer. Maintainer of VVV. Thankful community member of all the above.

Multisite!


Edmund Turbin

Edmund Turbin is a London based Solutions Engineer at WP Engine originally from New York. He has been developing websites for over 10 years.

He’s worked with proprietary and open source CMS platforms at media, publishing and ad tech companies and is passionate about optimizing workflows.

When the laptop is closed, he enjoys producing tech house in the studio, cycling and spending time with his family.

Theming in WordPress: Where do I start?


Aaron Campbell

I’ve been doing web development professionally for over 16 years.

I’ve been a core contributor to WordPress since 2007 (WordPress 2.3), co-led the WordPress 3.6 release, am a part of the WordPress security team, and have commit access to WordPress core.

Website Security – The Big Picture w/ Simple Steps to Take


Matt Geri

My name is Matt, I’m a full time WordPress Engineer at XWP. I’ve been a WordPress developer since 2005 and have loved the platform ever since.

I run a WordPress development blog at http://mattgeri.com where I post daily articles and videos on WordPress development.

The ultimate WordPress development environment


Ulrich Pogson

Have been teaching myself web development with WordPress since January 2012. I moved from support to theme development to plugin development to developing a site with custom features. I would like to show what I have done as there are not many resources how to develop and deploy small/medium sites. Hopefully, this will start a discussion and sharing of other solutions.

Themes & Plugins in harmony

 

Welcome to Vienna – a public transport guide

In two weeks Vienna will welcome more than 2200 WordPressers and according to our stats, 2000 of you are not Austrian! So in this post, we’ll try to give you some useful tips about getting around the town.

General information

Vienna is the capital of Austria, the main language spoken is (Austrian) German: “Wien” [vi:n] is the German name for Vienna. The local currency is the Euro. We have recently grown to almost 2 million inhabitants (Austria: 8.7mio) and rank top in the World’s most liveable cities. This is in part because Vienna is considered a very safe city (don’t push it, though), with good and affordable restaurants, and has an excellent public transport system.

Getting to Vienna

Airport

Vienna International Airport (IATA: VIE) is located about 16 km southeast of the city center.

From the airport to Vienna

Vienna Tourism has a good overview page but here is a quick list of the most useful options:

ÖBB

Take the regional train S7 (operator ÖBB) for 4.40 Euros (buy two single tickets at the machine, located directly on the platform – one to the city border plus one to any destination within Vienna). Make sure to validate the tickets before boarding the train! The train runs twice every hour at :18 and :48. At Wien Mitte – Landstraße station, 24 minutes later, change to the orange U3 (destination Ottakring) to get off at the venue at station Volkstheater.

City Airport Train (CAT)

The City Airport Train is more expensive but a bit quicker. It also runs twice every hour at :06 and :36 and will take you in 16 minutes non-stop for 11 Euros (17 return; buy at a machine upfront) to Wien Mitte – Landstraße station. Then buy a ticket (see below) and change to the orange subway U3 (destination Ottakring) to get off at the venue at station Volkstheater.

Wien_Mitte_CAT

 

TAXI

A Taxi will cost you between 28 and 50 Euros and takes about 25 minutes. It can be cheaper to book it in advance.

UBER

Uber operates in Vienna and offers both UberX and Black Car services.

Train into Vienna

You will most likely travel with the ÖBB and arrive at the new central station, Hauptbahnhof Wien. Buy a ticket (see below) and take the tram line D (destination Nußdorf) and get off near the venue at stop Dr.-Karl-Renner-Ring (adjacent to Volkstheater).

Bus into Vienna

Most international buses stop at the Vienna International Busterminal (VIB) at Erdberg. Buy a ticket (see below) and take the orange subway U3 (destination Ottakring) to get off at the venue at station Volkstheater.

 

Getting around Vienna

Public Transport

The three main types of public transport in Vienna (the name of the operating transport company is Wiener Linien) are subway (“U-Bahn”), tram (“Straßenbahn”, colloquial “Bim”) and bus. They mostly run very often, with intervals of up to 5 minutes. One ticket is valid for all types of transport.

Last trains and busses leave around 1am, though there is a separate night bus network; subways run all night on Fri-Sat and Sat-Sun.

Be aware that for political reasons public transport routing is not included in Google maps, so consider to download the official app qando (Android alternative: Öffi). Web version Journey planner.

2015 metro maoTickets

You can buy tickets online (you will have to create an account, though) or at the multilingual ticket machines (at all subway stations). Single tickets are also available in trams and buses with a surcharge for 2.30 EUR (children: 1.20 EUR). They are valid for one ride including transfers.

On ticket machines, the area of Vienna is sometimes also called “Zone 100”, so apart from the airport, you’ll always be travelling within that zone.

  • One-way: 2.20 EUR (unlimited changes, also available as 4-strip version for 8.80 EUR)
  • 24hr/48hr/72hr ticket: 7.60 / 13.30 / 16.50 EUR
  • Vienna weekly ticket (careful: only valid from Monday to Monday 9am): 16,20 EUR
  • 8-day-ticket Vienna: 38.40 EUR (8 independent strips, invalidate one per person, valid all day until 1am), can be used as a 4-day ticket for 2 people always travelling together.
  • Trivia: a yearly ticket is only 365 Euros.

Children up to the age of 6 travel for free. Children up to fifteen years of age ride free on Sundays, holidays and during the Vienna school holidays.

 

Bike around Vienna

2e05227494dad1b0650ecf8b85f733e5Vienna is also great to get around by bike! There are a lot of biking lanes and tracks and a convenient system to rent bikes: At 120 Citybike stations all around town, you can rent a bike (almost) for free, and ride from one station to the other. At the stations’ terminals, you can find out where other stations are and the number of available bikes or empty bike boxes.

Registration: Online at www.citybikewien.at (website optimized for mobile use!) or at a Citybike Terminal with a credit card (Master Card, Visa, JCB) or a Maestro Card (debit card) issued by an Austrian bank. One-time registration fee: 1 Euro.

Rental charges: The rental starts with the removal of a Citybike from the bike box and ends when the Citybike is returned to a bike box. Caution: Wait until the green lights come on, which signals the end of the rental. Per rental, the first hour is free, 2nd hour 1 Euro, 3rd hour 2 Euros, for every further hour 4 Euros.

Warning: If the bike is not returned after 5 days, a flat rate of 600 Euros is charged.

If you want to use a journey planner for biking around Vienna, we recommend the website AnachB or their app .

Whether it’s by bike, foot or tram – have fun exploring Vienna!

Thank you to all #WCEU Small Business sponsors!

Join us in saying a big thank you to our Small Business sponsors! We’re extremely happy to be supported by companies of all sizes who want to give back to the community by helping this event become a reality.

Thank you, Small Business sponsors! ❤️


Savviilogo-savvii

Savvii  is fast, secure & easy hosting for your WordPress websites. We are from Europe, for Europe. Would you like to try it out? The 30-day money back guarantee, month-to-month based agreements and migration service make it easy.


Delicious Brainslogo-deliciousbrains

We make super awesome products for WordPress. Currently WP Migrate DB Pro and WP Offload S3.

Head to http://deliciousbrains.com for more information.


mensmaximus logo-mensmaximus

Maverick, Supervisor, Transformer. WordPress professional since 2006 with focus on plugin development. WooCommerce specialist and security expert with fifteen years’ experience in the hosting industry. Long story short: WordPress is my passion.

http://mensmaximus.com


WinningWPlogo-winningwp

WinningWP is an award-winning blog with the aim of exploring all manner of WordPress-related techniques and resources, disseminating helpful information, and providing useful tips, deals and insights to anybody and everybody with an interest in WordPress.


Fix my WPFixmyWP

FixMyWP.com was founded in Greece and went online in April 2013 after understanding that there was a need for small fix/repairs among WP sites.
Our goal was to offer ala carte services to anyone having an issue with WP. As we progressed we realized that there was an extra need for offering WP Maintenance Services so from January of 2014 we started offering this extra pack of servies to our clients.
Our goal is to keep our clients happy and stress free so they can enjoy WordPress in full speed.


Torque Magazinelogo-torque

Torque Magazine is a news site for all things WordPress. We feature content from a collection of writers, each with different skill-sets and experiences with WordPress. Check in daily for tutorials, news, interviews, and more.


Easynamelogo-easyname

Wir sind der faire und professionelle Webhoster für Domain Junkies und Hobby Tüftler! Bei uns gibt es über 400 Domainendungen und tolle Angebote für WordPress Hosting.

http://easyname.ch/de/hosting


Kajamba

logo-kajambaWe’re the Good Guys 🙂
Kajamba was founded by industry veterans who got fed up working in big companies with inefficient operation that eats up a lot of the profit they can give to their publishers.
We’ve been living and breathing online advertising since early 2,000’s, so we knew there’s a better way to do things…

Cultivating happy teams, for better business – a WordPress business panel moderated by Brian Krogsgard

Meet the leaders of some of the leading WordPress-centric consulting agencies worldwide, as they are interviewed by Brian Krogsgard on what it takes to cultivate a happy team, with discussion topics ranging from remote work and salary to management feedback, and personal growth.

Brian will be joined on stage by Magne Ilsaas (Norway), Matt Johnson (USA), Ilona Filipi (UK) and Alex Frison (Germany) for the panel that we called “Cultivating happy teams, for better business”.


Magne Ilsaas, Founder of DekodeMagne Ilsaas, Dekode

Magne is the founder and manager of Dekode, Norway’s biggest WordPress agency.

With a background in design, he works on bridging the gap between design and technology in order to create the best and most cost-efficient WordPress projects for their clients. When he’s not working on WordPress projects, you’ll find him skiing or fishing in Lofoten.


Matt Johnson, CTO of Alley InteractiveMatt Johnson, Alley Interactive

Matt Johnson is co-founder and CTO of Alley Interactive, a full-service digital agency in New York City that works with large media companies and non-profit organizations, where he leads company technology strategy and outreach to the open source community.


Alexander Frison, Germany – Co-founder InpsydeAlex Frison, Inpsyde

Alex is a co-founder of wpengineer.com and co-owner of Inpsyde, the no. 1 WordPress agency in Germany, WordPress.com VIP partner and Gold WooExpert. His team and he are behind the multilingual WordPress solution MultilingualPress, BackWPup, Adminimize, Search & Replace and many, many more…

He’s responsible for WordPress VIP projects as project manager, strategic partnerships, and other marketing & growth activities.

When he’s not in front of his PC, he’s enjoying time with friends and family and if he is not injured, he loves to play squash, tennis and football.

 


Ilona Filipi, Co-founder Moove AgencyIllona Fillipi, Moove

Ilona Filipi is the co-founder and MD of Innovative WordPress Agency Moove.

She blogs at IlonaFilipi.com about the business side of running a WordPress Agency.

 


Panel moderator: Brian Krogsgard

Photo by Tammie Lister, Eyetaken.com

Photo by Tammie Lister, Eyetaken.com

Brian is a web developer, writer, and consultant based in Birmingham, Alabama. He is the editor of Post Status, a news and information website for WordPress professionals.

He loves building websites, and he builds them with WordPress.

Brian delivers news, commentary, and WordPress insights on a daily basis and has an in-depth knowledge of everything important that is happening in the WordPress world.

Brian hosts a weekly WordPress podcast which you can follow on https://poststatus.com/category/draft/.

 

Say hello to the wonderful #WCEU Subscriber sponsors!

We’d like to ask you to join us in saying a big thank you to our Subscriber level sponsors. Your help and support are extremely valuable to us and WordCamp Europe could not have happened without it.

Thank you!


logo-cloudaccessCloud Access.net

CloudAccess.net provides managed WordPress hosting built on a highly optimized platform. The custom Cloud Control Panel includes innovative features and integrates into a specialized Support Team who cares for your WordPress sites.


Webempressa

logo-webempresaHosting Especializado en seguridad y velocidad para WordPress. Tienes muchas cosas que decir y con WordPress + Webempresa te ayudamos a llevar tu mensaje al mundo.
Nos tienes disponibles 24 horas, todos los días del año listos para ayudarte a resolver los problemas y dudas con tu Hosting. Reglas de seguridad Anti-hackeo para WordPress.
Será un placer alojarte: http://www.webempresa.com/wordpress/hosting-wordpress.


 

.ME Registry

logo-dotme.ME is a top level domain name that is all about YOU — giving you an original destination to build and personalise your corporate or personal blog or brand. As a leading personal online domain, .ME is uniquely positioned to cater to professional and personal needs of its users by providing them with an easy way to express their uniqueness to the world. Whether you’re looking for a hub to house all of your blogs, a new blog, personal branding website, entrepreneurial endeavour, or a clever domain hack, .ME is here to help!


Press Customizr

logo-presscustomizrPress Customizr is a France-based company designing and developing user-friendly WordPress products. Built on a solid framework, Press Customizr’s most popular theme, the Customizr, is used by 100K+ users and has been top rated by hundreds of satisfied users on WordPress.org.
Press Customizr’s mission is to help small businesses easily customize their WordPress website.
Press Customizr is happy to give back to the WordPress community by sponsoring the 2016 WordCamp Europe 🙂

Learn more at presscustomizr.com.


logo-ithemesiThemes

Since 2008, iThemes has been creating WordPress tools to help you build and grow your freelance web design business with WordPress.

Introducing the #WCEU focused tracks: “Running a WordPress business”

For the first time this year, WordCamp Europe will have more than two tracks. With the conference expanding almost twice since 2015, we decided to add more content and most of all – experiment with formats and topics.

Our third track is going to be in the beautiful Leopold Museum, just a 2 min walk from Halle E+G and it will host all our networking activities (link), three highly targeted, focused content tracks (development, business, and community) and for the first time for an event of this side – unconference (more information coming in the next few days).

Today we’d like to introduce the first of our three focused tracks: “Running a WordPress business” and its amazing speakers. They come from all over the world and bring you know-how on successful practices that each WordPress business needs to be aware of. From agency to SaaS and services built on WordPress, we bring you some of the best professionals in the industry to share practical advice on marketing strategies, project management, development and growth strategies and managing a successful team.

So, without further ado, please welcome Becs Rivett-Kemm, Matt Cheney, Becky Davis, Mario Peshev and Lesley Molecke – our lovely business track speakers.

Becs Rivett-Kemm

Becs has been an email marketer for the past 8 years and is passionate about design and code. She works for Receiptful and also provides freelance email marketing consultancy, giving her a wide range of experience of the practical applications of email and the challenges of email for the common man. Her goal is to teach people how to do email well themselves, rather than relying on her to do it for them.

Her talk is What’s my WordPress site’s email strategy?

Matt Cheney

Matt is a long time web developer who has implemented several decoupled CMS solutions using AngularJS and Backbone. He is also the co-founder of Pantheon which provides WordPress and Drupal hosting.

Matt’s talk: Making the Leap: Successful Products as a Web Agency.

Becky Davis

Becky is an independent front-end developer specializing in custom WordPress themes and project management. She is Chicago native and is very active in the WordPress community there, including helping with WordCamp Chicago and running one of its most active meetups. She loves training and teaching WordPress as well as gardening, movies, and biking. She is especially fond of bars with couches and good whiskey.

Becky will talk about Project Management or How to Herd Cats.

Mario Peshev

Mario is the CEO of DevriX, a distributed WordPress development agency with a team of 20. He’s been a WordPress Core contributor since WordPress 3.7, an author of dozens of plugins, and a technical aficionado with over 12 years of software engineering and architecture experience. Over the past 5 years, Mario has been leading a remote team around the world, leading the technical business development of large platforms in the automotive, airline, media, educational and marketing fields, and consulting businesses on growth, business development and architecture.

Mario will talk about Managing a remote WordPress team.

Lesley Molecke

Lesley is a co-founder of boutique WordPress agency, Cornershop Creative, which focuses on helping nonprofit and small business customers set and meet their goals online. She’s been working on the web since she was in high school and ran her own small web design shop before she could drive. Prior to founding Cornershop Creative, she managed enterprise-level CMS rollouts for both the City of Albuquerque and the Albuquerque Public Schools (one of the largest districts in the US) in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Lesley and her co-founders have turned a pipe dream of a business into a reality that employs 10 remote employees and helps more than 100 nonprofit customers each year.

Lesley’s talk: Changing the world, one WordPress site at a time: How we built a successful, distributed WordPress firm serving nonprofits.

 

Cheers to SiteGround and Hover – our amazing #WCEU after party sponsors

Ah, the WordCamp Europe after party… Each year it’s something else entirely. And this year it’s going to be on a whole other level, so save your Saturday night and stay tuned for the detailed announcement next week.

But right now, we’d like you to join us in saying a huge “Thank you” to the companies that are making the after party possible – our amazing after party sponsors SiteGround and Hover!

They’re not only getting you a drink during the after party, they’ve got a lot of other surprises for you so don’t be shy and give them some love!

Screenshot 2016-06-02 11.24.30

 


SiteGround

SiteGround with over 10 years in the business provides premier managed WordPress hosting! They have servers optimized for ultimate WordPress speed and security, and provide many extras for the WordPress fans – automatic updates for the core WordPress and its plugins, WordPress SuperCacher for speed acceleration, staging tool for the coders and unique WordPress auto installer for the starting users – all crafted in-house by the SiteGround team. They are also involved with the WordPress community speaking, supporting and attending various WordCamps around the world, and by sponsoring WordCamp Europe they want to keep contributing to the amazing WordPress community.


Hover

With hundreds of domain extensions, no heavy-handed upselling and best-in-class support, Hover makes it easy to spend less time on your domains and more time on your big idea.

 

 

 

Introducing the #WCEU focused tracks: “Building a WordPress community”

For the first time this year, WordCamp Europe will have more than two tracks. With the conference expanding almost twice since 2015, we decided to add more content and most of all – experiment with formats and topics.

Our third track is going to be in the beautiful Leopold Museum, just a 2 min walk from Halle E+G, and it will host all our networking activities, three highly targeted, focused content tracks (development, business, and community), and for the first time for an event of this side – unconference (more information coming in the next few days).

Today we’d like to introduce the wonderful speakers who form our “Building your local WordPress community” focused track.

We all know that community matters and people are in the core of why we love WordPress so much. That’s one of the reasons this year we’re introducing the European communities in special blog series.

But we didn’t want to stop there. During our focused track dedicated to community, we’ll hear about the experiences of people from all over the world. Dee Teal (Australia), Kel Santiago-Pilarski (Japan/Poland), Sergey Biryukov (Russia) and Naoko Takano (Japan) all have fascinating stories to share and friendly advice for everyone who’s involved in a local WordPress community.

Welcome to the WordCamp Europe stage!

Dee Teal

Dee Teal is a front end developer building bespoke sites for a wide range of enterprises and in recent times under contract to top quality WordPress agencies. Dee has been using WordPress exclusively since having had her mind blown with its possibilities at her first WordCamp in 2011. Since then she’s been a sold out advocate of WordPress meetups, WordCamps and the WordPress community as a whole. She comes from Australia and speaks on events in her local Melbourn, around Australia and now – on WordCamp Europe.

Dee will talk about Keys to Growing & Developing your WordPress Meetup.

Kel Santiago-Pilarski

From distant Japan comes Kel Santiago-Pilarski. Originally from Philippines and based in Japan since May 2014, she works as Writer ad Evangelist of DigitalCube Inc. – Amazon Web Services Advanced Consulting Partner and WordPress Code Poet Consultant. She spoked in quite a few WordCamps (Warsaw, Brisbane, Kansai, Krakow) and is also on a polyglot team who helps localize WordPress. Kel organizes meetups in Japan and international meetups, trainings and hands-on in Singapore and Poland.

She will talk about Contributing to WordPress for Business, Profession & the Community

Sergey Biryukov

Sergey is a freelance WordPress developer since 2006, core contributor since 2010, contributing developer since 2011 and core committer since 2013. He co-founded and was a maintainer of Russian WordPress community since 2007. Besides all that, Sergey helps on support forums, he’s a plugin author and WordCamp Speaker.

He will talk about Managing a local WordPress community

Naoko Takano

Naoko Takano is a Globalizer at Automattic. She is a part of Team Global, which facilitates internationalization and localization of WordPress.com and other products. She has been involved in the Japanese WordPress community since 2003, contributing in the areas of translation, documentation, community including meetup and WordCamp organization.

Naoko will talk about The Story of the Japanese WordPress Community

Community tribe meetup

In addition to the focus track, there’s also a planned Community tribe meet up on Friday morning, so if you’d like to connect with other people around the world that organise local WordPress events, be at the Leopold Museum at 10am.

 

Excited about #WCEU yet? We surely are.

Three weeks to go! See you there.

Oh no! #WCEU tickets are sold out again? Here are a few options

We hate to be telling you “We told you so”, but… we told you so!

And since we really like you, we’d love to see you in Vienna on June 24th and 25th for that tiny conference which will gather 2200 people from 68 countries and will have more than 70 amazing speakers covering a wide range of WordPress topics.

So if, by any chance, you missed the very last batch of WordCamp Europe tickets, here are a few things you can do to join us at the MuseumQuartier:

Find a ticket on the Facebook tickets exchange

We started a ticket exchange in the WordCamp Europe Facebook event where everyone who won’t be able to make the conference, can post their tickets and you can contact them and exchange details. PayPal works great for transactions and all you need to do is ask whoever is transferring the ticket to you, to change their details using the edit link in their confirmation email, with yours. Some people are even offering their spare tickets for free.

Depending on when you acquire the ticket, you might not be able to have a printed badge (you still get one, we’ll just write your name on it) and a t-shirt that’s your size. Your dietary requirements might not be met as well, but you will be there, so it’s all worth it!

Go to the WordCamp Europe Facebook event

Ask on Twitter

Earlier in the day, we asked people who had spare tickets, to tweet about them using the official conference hashtag #WCEU. Check the hashtag or the official WCEU Twitter account, we try to retweet every post about a spare ticket.

Some people found tickets that way! Maybe you can too.

No luck? Grab a Live stream ticket

And if none of this works, you can still grab a Live Stream ticket completely free and enjoy the talks from your sofa or chilling in the park. Then join the social media fun by commenting and posting your thoughts about WordCamp Europe using the official #WCEU hashtag. It won’t be the same, but you will feel included. Because the WordPress community is awesome like that.

Get your free live stream ticket

We hope this helps!

Love,

The WCEU org team