Remy Perona – Featured Speaker

Remy is joining us from Montreal. He is speaking Sunday afternoon at 1:30 pm in Rm 129. His topic is on plugin release workflow. Let’s get to know him…

Outside of my WordPress life, I’m very busy with my very lively corgi, and my two cats, who all want a lot of attention.

I’m also a WoW & Hearthstone player, hit me up if you play too, I love to chat about it!

My presentation goal is to share the whole process we have put in place at WP Media to release a new version of WP Rocket. I’ll show how there is much more work involved than just development, the tools we use, and how we split up the tasks in the team to be the most efficient possible, knowing we all work remote. It should be interesting for any other team doing product for WordPress, or even for agency/team being remote to learn about new tools and different process.

It will be my first time coming to Toronto so I’m looking forward to discovering it a bit! And I love WordCamp to connect with friends and meet new people!

Connect with Remy through his speaker profile.


Make sure you have your ticket to #WCTO before they sell out!

Gilles Gagnon – Featured Speaker

Gilles is one of our local speakers. He is speaking Saturday at 2pm in Rm 147. His topic is growing a website building business. Let’s get to know him…

Prior to starting several businesses, Gilles worked in the corporate world for some 15 years. When not serving his clients, Gilles plays squash, reads, cycles, learns, goes to the theatre and travels. He has also been a music composer and producer.

His web building business is TrueConnectionsWeb.com. He’s also a video producer and owns and operates TrueConnectionsVideo.com. One of his personal projects is TheWisdomSpeakers.com which he started years ago. The Wisdom Speakers showcases wisdom vignettes of extraordinary, ordinary people.

Gilles is also currently working Continue reading “Gilles Gagnon – Featured Speaker”

Matt Graham – Featured Speaker

Matt is one of our local speakers. He is speaking in the Dev Track (Rm 129), Sunday morning at 10 am. His topic is MVC in Plugin and Theme Development. Let’s get to know Matt a little better…

I’m a husband to Heather, I’m a dad of two boys, my son Kaelen is 7 and my son Mackenzie is 5 years old. Mackie is legally blind; so I’m a big advocate of accessibility though I feel like I have so much to learn about it. I’m a Christian. I grew up Pentecostal, but I really like picking apart my and other’s beliefs and I’m not afraid to ask questions or say “I don’t know.” My default is “love everybody equally” even if I do a poor job at it sometimes. I’m into so many things: model building, electronics; car, pro and home audio; cooking, BBQ (low and slow makes meat sing); I love Star Trek and Star Wars equally; I’m not afraid of what JJ Abrams and Star Trek Discovery might bring to shake things up; I love music and singing; I think I could be a voice actor, but I just don’t have the time to pursue it. I’m one of those people who don’t have a favourite anything; the idea is foreign to me, and I’ve only come to accept this as normal recently.

I love clean, readable code. But so many times I’ve had to dive into a plugin or theme to find out how to override some code and I find a complete mess of spaghetti code with logic and HTML all jumbled up. I don’t like it, and I don’t want anyone else to have to experience that from my code. I take you through my method of creating clean, readable, testable, well categorized code by using OPP and MVC within WordPress themes and plugins.

If you, like me, have seen some really terrible code and don’t want anyone else to be on the receiving end of bad code that you’ve written, come to this presentation. I won’t tell you that it needs to be exactly what I do, but more of a mental framework of what OOP and MVC can be in WordPress Plugins and Themes.

I live in Whitby, a small-medium town east of Toronto. I like the diversity of Toronto. That you’re no more than a 20 minute subway ride away from a community with different experiences, different outlook, different food – or it could be right next door.

Connect with Matthew through his speaker profile.


Make sure you have your ticket to #WCTO before they sell out!

Joshua Wold – Featured Speaker

Joshua is coming to Toronto from Idaho. He is speaking Sunday afternoon at 1:30 pm in Rm 147. His topic is Sketches in which he shows you how to lay out a project (or problem) with simple sketches. Let’s get to know him…

When I was 16 I was hired as a lifeguard for the summer and was excited to take the job. However, at the same time I got offered a job as a graphic artist at a screen printing shop. After some deliberation I chose the design job. I’m thankful for that decision as it has helped shape much of my life since, including how I met my wife!

I enjoy spending time in bookstores, running, drawing, playing with Lego (now that I have a 4 year old son I can use him as my cover to keep buying them), playing old computer games with friends (looking at you Age of Empires 2!), and much more.

As a teenager I decided Continue reading “Joshua Wold – Featured Speaker”

Rodrigo Donini – Featured Speaker

Rodrigo comes to us from Brazil. He is speaking Saturday at 4 pm in Rm 149. His topic is Tips To Shield Your WP Site. Let’s get to know him…

“I started my life with WordPress eight years ago, and on the beginning like anyone, I’ve studied, tested and understood how it works this CMS and from this point I start to create my own things like themes, plugins and others.

I’m a nerd, software engineer, husband, father and curious about everything is around me, not necessary in this order.

Currently I’m a global speaker, teacher and WordPress evangelist. I’m a person very involved with the community.

Also I’m one of the organizers of the WordCamp Porto Alegre in south of Brazil.

Currently I’m Software Engineer and Technical Screener at Toptal.”

My presentation have main focus in help WordPress user in general, developers and sysadmins to Continue reading “Rodrigo Donini – Featured Speaker”

To Be or Not To Be Multilingual?

by OnTheGoSystems

Sometimes WordPress users may think that multilingual websites are not necessary for their audience. However, there is a huge potential of targeting a much larger audience by going multilingual, even for small businesses.

WPML makes it easy for you to translate web pages, posts, custom types, taxonomies, and even more, into different languages. It offers more than 40 languages to choose from and you can even add variants of languages, such as Canadian French or Colombian Spanish, to enable localizing your content and targeting the right market.

Imagine you’re a restaurant owner in an area visited by people from many countries. Naturally, you will want to translate your menu into the most prevalent languages. You want to reach out to as many people as possible, right?

That’s exactly the same situation for your WordPress site. If you provide your website visitors the content in their mother tongue, you are not only cultivating their trust but getting closer to them. You are generating new opportunities to expand your influence.

  • Regarding e-commerce alone, customers are aware that they have multiple options available for buying online. One way to increase your customer satisfaction is showing that you are prepared and willing to make them special, by making it easier for them to place orders in the language they are most comfortable with. This is an important first step.
  • You are also increasing the possibilities of being discovered in countries which rely mainly on local search engines. This way you are also increasing your credibility. Your users will appreciate the time and effort you are making to become multilingual.  They will realize that, by taking this step, you are committed to managing a genuine, long-term business.
  • Additionally, you can take it a step further by localizing or adapting your content according to the country. For example, you can adapt your content to Colombian or Mexican Spanish, showing your audience in a practical way that you understand their culture and that they are important to you.
  • Finally, you can translate your website in accord with the culture and legislation of the country, sending the right message to the right audience.

As you can see, in a globalized world, becoming multilingual is no longer an option but a necessity. Are you ready to become multilingual?


Be sure you have your ticket to WordCamp Toronto #WCTO. Join in the fun and discovery of growing your business with WordPress.

Conrad Hall – Featured Speaker

Conrad is one of our local speakers. He is speaking Sunday afternoon at 2:30 pm in the auditorium. His topic is the launching of new programs in Toronto. Let’s get to know him…

My favourite thing to do is grooming; not mine though. I have just enough hair to cover my head and it requires very little care.

Growing up with horses, I used to wile away hours brushing them and talking to them. When Silas was with me (a black lab), I brushed him every day. There is something soothing in the activity.

In the more mainstream line of activities… Reading tops my list (a good thing since I’m an author). Walking, hiking, camping are near the top. I enjoy cooking and baking, but I do a lot less of it now since I’m single. If I cook/bake it now – I end up eating it!

I’m doing a presentation Sunday afternoon on the future of WordPress in Toronto. That probably sounds all official, but it’s Continue reading “Conrad Hall – Featured Speaker”

How to Get Started as a WordPress Contributor

First published on the DreamHost blog.

By Megan Hendrickson

If you’re DreamHost fan, you probably know that we freaking love open source.

image of contributor community
People Meeting Brainstorming Business Plan Startup Concept

And WordPress — the behemoth that powers 28 percent of the internet — is the ultimate open-source project. That means it’s developed and maintained by a dedicated community of contributors — awesome people like you and me — rather than a for-profit company.

Even better? Becoming one of those stalwart WordPress contributors and shaping the future of the platform is easier than you might imagine. Plus, there are many excellent avenues for contributing. Along with the obvious coding and development roles, you can get involved in design, translation, community outreach, and much more. Continue reading “How to Get Started as a WordPress Contributor”

Sponsor Spotlight – OnTheGoSystems

This content was first published with WordCamp Vienna

We are OnTheGoSystems, the creators of WPML and Toolset.

WPML – the WordPress Multilingual Plugin.

Every time you think about WordPress multilingual, you associate it immediately to WPML. Why? Because WPML makes it possible to have your WordPress site ready to provide content in different languages quickly and easily.

WPML has evolved to become the most complete tool to translate your WordPress site. Nowadays, you are not only able to have a site completely translatable, but  you can also count on local or external translators to provide the best content for your users. If you are thinking about running a multilingual Continue reading “Sponsor Spotlight – OnTheGoSystems”

Toronto Wapuu Drawing Contest

Toronto Wants A Wapuu

What’s a Wapuu, right? It’s okay. Everyone looks at me funny when I say “Wapuu.” It sounds very video game.

Here’s Wapuu:

Original Wapuu image
Original Wapuu

Cute little guy, isn’t he?

Ottawa has a Wapuu.

Montreal has a famour poutine eating Wapuu.

In fact, Montreal has two Wapuu. The 2016 Wapuu is munching a bagel.

Halifax has a Wapuu.

And yes, to be fair, Ottawa actually has 3 Wapuu.

Heck! Nuremberg has 7 Wapuu!!

Toronto has none. Zip. Zero. Zilch. Nada. Bupkiss. A nineteen hand (for all you cribbage players). Have a look at all the Wapuu. (All links open in a new tab.)

Toronto Wapuu Drawing Contest

It’s open to everyone. Every age. Every location.

Draw a Wapuu that represents Toronto.

Maybe it’s hugging the Skydome or Continue reading “Toronto Wapuu Drawing Contest”

WordCamp Toronto 2017 is over. Check out the next edition!