The underlying architecture of the WordPress content storage and retrieval systems provide a flexible and powerful way of creating all manner of sites. This talk was an overview of that capability and stern reminder that its not about the WordPress plugins you install, but the Information Architecture you implement that will make your site a success or not.
This is the presentation I gave to the WordPress Hamilton Meetup on October 15, 2015 at Co-Motion on King. We discussed Information Architecture as well as how this methodology can be used as a Content Strategy.
Basic developers understand, at some level, what WordPress "does" and how to modify its behavior. Better developers understand how to create objects, object meta data, and object relationships in WordPress (post types, meta, taxonomies). But the best engineers understand how all of this data actually manifests itself in the raw database architecture.
Understanding how WordPress stores, organizes, and relates data when you strip away the PHP software layer can give you a deeper understanding and appreciation for the brilliance, deficits, potential, limits, and legacy of WordPress.
We'll study WordPress's database schema, relate it back to core data model concepts like custom post types and taxonomies, meander holes in the models (like "why isn't there term meta??"), and even compare to past database structure to see how WordPress's database has evolved with the software.
Introduction presentation from NARdiGras' Real Estate WordCamp given by Dustin Luther: http://www.realtor.org/educsess.nsf/pagesluNew/Conf10IntroWP
Covers strategy for real estate professionals on how to best use WordPress as the hub of their online marketing.
This talk explains the basics of Content Architecture and Modeling, the different content types in WordPress and how to discover your own content types
Wordpress site scaling architecture on cloud infrastructure with AWSLe Kien Truc
Wordpress site scaling architecture on cloud infrastructure with AWS. The architecture including Database, CDN, and deployment model. It's just a high level and concept design
This is the presentation I gave to the WordPress Hamilton Meetup on October 15, 2015 at Co-Motion on King. We discussed Information Architecture as well as how this methodology can be used as a Content Strategy.
Basic developers understand, at some level, what WordPress "does" and how to modify its behavior. Better developers understand how to create objects, object meta data, and object relationships in WordPress (post types, meta, taxonomies). But the best engineers understand how all of this data actually manifests itself in the raw database architecture.
Understanding how WordPress stores, organizes, and relates data when you strip away the PHP software layer can give you a deeper understanding and appreciation for the brilliance, deficits, potential, limits, and legacy of WordPress.
We'll study WordPress's database schema, relate it back to core data model concepts like custom post types and taxonomies, meander holes in the models (like "why isn't there term meta??"), and even compare to past database structure to see how WordPress's database has evolved with the software.
Introduction presentation from NARdiGras' Real Estate WordCamp given by Dustin Luther: http://www.realtor.org/educsess.nsf/pagesluNew/Conf10IntroWP
Covers strategy for real estate professionals on how to best use WordPress as the hub of their online marketing.
This talk explains the basics of Content Architecture and Modeling, the different content types in WordPress and how to discover your own content types
Wordpress site scaling architecture on cloud infrastructure with AWSLe Kien Truc
Wordpress site scaling architecture on cloud infrastructure with AWS. The architecture including Database, CDN, and deployment model. It's just a high level and concept design
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
If your job is to wield that magic for your clients, than you need a set of incantations you can count on. You need DevCraft.
How To Keep The Barcamp Buzz Going All Year LongEric Marden
My name is Eric Marden, and I'm here to recruit you. If you got something out of BarCamp, then here is a list of events that are coming up to keep the Buzz going all year long.
The Orlando Creative/Tech community needs you to get involved. To withhold your talents is practically criminal. Join us!
What started out as a simple status update has evolved into much more. Much, much more. This rapid-fire talk will explore some of the ways in which Twitter, and to a lesser degree its copycats, have become a new communication medium.
One part entrepreneurial rally cry, two parts iterative dissection of internet trends, and one part philosophical meta-rant; this talk adds up to be one hell of a thought provoker.
Building on the basic theme of the version 1 of this talk, the "incomplete history of the internet" portion has been completely reworked to better reflect current trends, and comes to a completely different set of conclusions.
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
If your job is to wield that magic for your clients, than you need a set of incantations you can count on. You need DevCraft.
How To Keep The Barcamp Buzz Going All Year LongEric Marden
My name is Eric Marden, and I'm here to recruit you. If you got something out of BarCamp, then here is a list of events that are coming up to keep the Buzz going all year long.
The Orlando Creative/Tech community needs you to get involved. To withhold your talents is practically criminal. Join us!
What started out as a simple status update has evolved into much more. Much, much more. This rapid-fire talk will explore some of the ways in which Twitter, and to a lesser degree its copycats, have become a new communication medium.
One part entrepreneurial rally cry, two parts iterative dissection of internet trends, and one part philosophical meta-rant; this talk adds up to be one hell of a thought provoker.
Building on the basic theme of the version 1 of this talk, the "incomplete history of the internet" portion has been completely reworked to better reflect current trends, and comes to a completely different set of conclusions.
11. Points I won’t be making
• You can use WordPress AS a CMS
• You need certain plugins to have a CMS
• WordPress is the last CMS you’ll ever need
@xentek
http://xentek.net
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12. what i will show you is…
@xentek
http://xentek.net
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