Il terzo gruppo di speaker

Oggi presentiamo il terzo gruppo di speaker:

Nikola Mitrovic

I’m born in 1994 in Leskovac, a city in south Serbia. After graduating from high school (Gymnasium – Mathematics major), I moved to Belgrade to study IT on Faculty of organizational sciences. During my studies, I came across web development and WordPress, and I was intrigued by it from the start. Now, three years later, I’m a big WordPress enthusiast, trying to support the community as much as I can. I started my career in Devana Technologies, the company behind ManageWP, as a Customer Happiness engineer. The whole ManageWP team teamed up with GoDaddy, where I continued working in the same position for almost a year. Right now, I’m a project coordinator in GoDaddy, and I’m part of the team which stands behind the WordPress Academy project in Serbia (Platform for learning WordPress for free in Serbian).

The things Codex doesn’t teach you about debugging

The things that can help beginners debug the most common issues in WordPress that are not easily found on Codex. Sharing my experience and giving advice that will save you a lot of time and headache in the future.


Paolo Dolci

Sono un Consulente SEO e Sviluppatore WordPress.

Ho una forte esperienza in ambito Web e Sicurezza e nel tempo ho ricoperto ruoli di Sistemista, Programmatore e Consulente per grosse realtà nazionali e internazionali.

Nel 2013 ho fondato la Web Agency WpSEO con la quale offriamo servizi di Posizionamento, Advertising e, ovviamente, modding/customizzazione di WordPress.


Lincoln Islam

Lincoln Islam Is the Founder & Visionary of CodeRex, Helping web designers earn 70% profit on their projects while giving access to a scalable team of resources without the need to hire employees.

From small to a bigger agency, Lincoln and his team has worked with Clients from all over the world and made their life easy, delivering top-notch services.

Lincoln has over seven years of experience with Open source projects and contributing them actively.

While he is making a living using open source to create and sell products, Lincoln has a dream to make a significant impact on employment rate where he lives.

Getting your WordPress website ready for Gutenberg

As a WordPress professional, I understand what this can mean for a business, especially small agencies and freelancers. WordPress designers and developers are often responsible for the websites they’ve created for their clients and small businesses can get bogged down in support when new changes come along.

The addition of a new editor–or any big change–will have a website developer’s phone ringing non-stop. Especially, if the new editor is installed by default when we update the WordPress core. Since updates can be automatic, there may be a lot of surprises (and not the good kind) for website owners who do not keep up with the WordPress community on a regular basis.

This talk will cover how to be proactive and get your website ready for Gutenberg.


Caroline Geven

Caroline started messing around with HTML and CSS when she was 12 years old and Geocities was still cool. Gradually she moved onto WordPress where she first created personal blogs, but soon created websites for others.

A few years ago she joined Yoast as a junior web developer. There she came to know the WordPress and its open source community. Currently she’s working as a technical product specialist for the plugin team at Yoast, where she focuses on quality assurance.

The importance of testing – or: how I love to break your code

Most developers I’ve come in contact with, hate testing and anything related to it. Fixing bugs is not as exciting as building awesome features. While you definitely need features that make your product worthwhile, no one wants to use a plugin or theme that’s riddled with bugs.
Every development team should have at least one member who loves breaking stuff. I’ve been that person for a very long time. In this talk I will explain how I test features, reproduce bugs and ensure upcoming releases meet our standards. At the end of the talk you’ll have a new perspective on the importance of testing and your role in this process.


Varun Sharma

Varun is the Founder & CEO at Tech Banker – A Premium WordPress Plugin Development Firm based out of Chandigarh, India.

Apart from an entrepreneur, he is a travel enthusiast and loves traveling across the globe with his family. He loves Punjabi food, and is a proud father of 2 cutest kids.

He started his journey for entrepreneurship in the year 2009 and had a privilege of providing services to Xerox GmbH.

Tech Banker today has around 16 WordPress plugins published over WordPress.org

Tech Banker has 150,000+ Active Installs (Combined) on WordPress.org

WordPress Coding Standards – A must for a Developer!

Coding Standards are a must for any developer!

WordPress Coding Standards become more important while developing Plugins and Themes to provide sustainability to the code.

With the Introduction of Tide Project, users will better understand what plugins and themes to install so they don’t break their sites with incompatible plugins and themes.

The coding standards Tide uses are WordPress-Core, WordPress-Docs, and WordPress-Extra from the PHPCS WPCS project.

This will eventually help Developers write reliable and secure code.

My Topic if selected shall cover the following workflow.

• Introduction to WordPress Coding Standards.
• How t to write WordPress Themes and Plugins based on WPCS.
• How will TIDE affect User Decision while choosing Plugins and Themes?
• How shall Tide improve the WordPress Ecosystem?
• How to install Tide Tests in a Local Environment?
• How to improve Code Quality and pass TIDE Audit?