WordCamp UK 2010

WordCampUK Manchester logoI attended my second WordCamp UK at the weekend, held this year in Manchester. The (un)conference was attended by around 200 people, and was held in the Manchester Metropolitan University Business School.

Like last year, the main benefit to me was to meet the key people in the UK’s WordPress community (in the flesh rather than just on Twitter). It was great to meet with the key people again (and I was very surprised that lots of people remembered me from last year!).

Here’s what I took away from this year’s WordCamp UK:

WordHack
Efficiently organised by Shaun Hare, this was a fantastic and stimulating experience. I was involved with a team of seven people who developed a completely new WordPress site at openaid.org.uk. This site reads XML data on DFID aid projects, transforms and imports the XML into Custom Post Types in WordPress, with a new theme that presents comments on the aid projects as a live conversation, and ties the comments to the post versions. Read more on the OpenAid project page. Brilliant going for half a dozen people in around 6 hours, and shows the real value of exposing government data for others to reuse.

OpenAid logo

BuddyPress
Paul Gibbs gave a great introduction to BuddyPress. This is a plugin for WordPress that adds social media and community features (extended profiles, friend relationships, groups, forums and activity streams). It looks relatively straightforward to set up, although there needs to be some tinkering around with existing themes. The most impressive example Paul gave was CycleOregon, which doesn’t look at all like a membership-driven site. I have two immediate uses for BuddyPress, both with an international dimension, and Paul’s talk was a great and timely introduction.

Theme frameworks and theme clubs
Theme development was a recurring (ahem) theme this year, but this time it was focussed on the growth of theme frameworks and theme clubs. Kimb Jones gave a good run-down of the theme club and commercial theme market, and this was followed by a launch of the private beta test for WonderFlux theme framework. This is an area where I need to learn more.

WordPress for the voluntary sector
There is a strong community of WordPress developers working with charities and other organisations in the voluntary sector, providing some innovative solutions. Jason King spoke about some of the opportunities and challenges. One observation was that small organisations use a lot of (commonly cloud-based) apps, and this can be challenging to integrate with, for example, a WordPress membership list. This group has a lot of relevance for my WordPress work.

WordPress in the Enterprise
This was another strong theme, as larger organisations are starting to see the benefit of using WordPress. Dave Coveney discussed outward-facing sites in Big Media and larger Enterprises, but there was no formal discussion about the use of WordPress as a social intranet within organisations (idea for a session next year?). We informally discussed some of the challenges of using WordPress within larger enterprises (of which more in a later blog post).

Will there be a WordCamp UK 2011?
The weekend proved that the WordCamp UK organisation is strong and vibrant.

Unfortunately the conference ended on a downbeat note, when Jane Wells from Automattic casually mentioned that the WordCamp.org organisation would prefer to see city-based WordCamps rather than larger events at a national level, following the practice in the US (although not, interestingly, Ireland, the UK, New Zealand, Sweden and others). I’m sure Jane didn’t intend to cause the resulting uproar!

Moving to a city-based model could be positive if it fosters a strong local community and those local WordCamps were able to attract experienced speakers from across the UK. But personally I value the broad cross-section of people at a UK-wide WordCamp and would like to see it continue.

I’d prefer to see WordCamp UK continue as a travelling circus, working alongside local WordPress communities to put on this exceptional event in different cities each year, while strong local groups also put on more local or regional events as appropriate. I’ve been trying to make contact with WordPress community in Scotland but there doesn’t appear to be a groundswell of opinion for even a Scotland-based WordPress User Group (if I’m wrong, please do get in touch!).

John Adams just-in-time session planning :)My most embarrassing moment, caught on camera
At 1100 on Saturday, I was comfortably sat in Room 1 settling in to listen to Jonny on theme frameworks, when I saw a tweet wondering why I wasn’t in Room 2. A minute or so later Gurbir walked through and informed me that I was meant to be running a session on Managing Multiple Instances of WordPress! This was an idea I’d had about 6 months ago, had proposed it on the wiki and had completely forgotten about it. Unfortunately, Mike Nolan was there with his iPhone, capturing my just-in-time session planning on Flickr!

Finally, a big Thanks!
Finally, a big thanks to Chi-Chi Ekweozor, Tony Scott and the other organisers. It was a really successful weekend, and shows that WordCamp UK organisation is strong and vibrant. It will be good to mature further into an organisation that mentors people with different skills and outlooks, and encourages local WordPress communities.

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2 Comments

  1. Posted July 19, 2010 at 6:13 pm | Permalink

    Very interesting post. Thanks for capturing all the links, a lot to catch up with. And the openaid site looks a fascinating development.

  2. Posted July 20, 2010 at 8:48 am | Permalink

    Hi John – thanks for mentioning me and my talk.

    You’re right, I should have covered the potential for WP (and BuddyPress) within an enterprise on the Intranet. A couple of our clients are experiment with this and coming up with some valuable feedback.

    Next year I’ll probably change tack on talks and get away from the broad brush-strokes and move onto usage examples and what we’ve learned from case studies.

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