 Thanks for the introduction. Last talk for today. Hope you're still alive. I'm sorry that I work as a WordPress core contributor at Yoast. I'm also a co-founder of a professional WordPress community and I contribute to Polyglot's support and mentor teams at WordPress. Each time your WordPress network indicates that there is an update available means that hundreds of people from around the world have volunteered their time, updates about fixes and improvements to the project. These contributions are what make open source projects so popular. Instead of a small team building only the features, the primary product, hundreds of thousands of people can volunteer to improve WordPress on a daily basis. Why would you want to contribute to WordPress? Well, it powers more than 30% of the web. So following project news gives you a better sense of where the project is headed, of recent trends and the opportunities it provides. You get to participate in one of the first amazing communities in the world and you can improve your development or design skills by getting feedback from more experienced developers and designers. If you have a few answers, WordPress can help you find clients or a job showing your names, showing a name on a contributor's list is one of the best ways to demonstrate that not only you know how WordPress works, you help build it. Contributing gives you an opportunity to decide which specific bugs could be fixed in an upcoming release of WordPress or which features could be improved. If you are able to dedicate at least even 5% of your resources to contributing, that will already make a big difference. A while ago, Matt Moldenweck, the co-founder of WordPress, suggested that companies making a revenue from WordPress and interested in developing a WordPress ecosystem should consider dedicating at least 5% of their employees' time to contribute to the WordPress project. Since then, many companies started doing that. From my personal experience of contributing, I started in 2007 by translating WordPress into Russian and writing a few plugins. A couple of years later, I submitted my first core ticket about a bug in an installation script. When you download the localized package of WordPress, they usually have WPconfig file translated as well. In my case, the commands in the file were translated into Russian, but the installation script was breaking the encodings, so the commands were unreadable. On the same day, a fix for this bug was committed. The commit message mentioned my name, and I ended up on the contributor's list for WordPress 3.0. Three years later, I had hundreds of patches, later I became a core commiter and now I might change the WordPress core myself. Now, most people who learn about the fact that WordPress is open-source and you could contribute back automatically assume that only contributions of code are useful to the project. However, you would be surprised to find that there are many ways that people can and will contribute back without even writing or understanding the new line of PHP or JavaScript. If you visit the WordPress.org homepage, you'll see a little get involved link in the top menu. It takes you to the make WordPress website where you can view all the areas in which you could get involved in. As of this time, there are 18 active teams working hard on the various aspects of WordPress. The teams are core design, bio-accessibility, polygons, support, documentation, teams, plugins, community, meta, training, test, TV, marketing, CLI, cost and time. The first thing you will need to do in order to be able to contribute to WordPress is to register, or press the torque count if you don't already have one. You receive an email to confirm your desk and generate your password. After you've done that, it would be a good idea to sign up for the WordPress Slack team. The WordPress project uses Slack as its main communication platform, the place in our previous platforms like I see in the sky. If you don't already use Slack, I also recommend the modern application for the operating system and thanks communication, much easier. Once you have signed up on Slack, look out for the channel of your chosen team and join them. Most of the teams have regular meetings for updates and other discussions. A small way of showing your contributions, you will now also have a little profile page. When you join a team and make a contribution, you will get the relevant image added to your profile. As you can see on my profile, I've contributed to core accessibility documentation, made a support for the WordPress 3D teams. I also have contributions to the plugin developer and the work cam speaker. It's not about collecting all the pages, but it's nice to be able to see how we've contributed to the project. I will now tell a bit more about each team, so we could decide what interests you the most. Each team has a handbook to help on what you contribute to us. So if you need any help with getting started, just go to the team blog and with the handbook. Are you a developer? Super. There are different enhancements, large and small that await your attention. Start by reading through the core handbook and you'll find instructions on contributing to the score and the score in the box. Find a good first work ticket to work on and show your following of the scoring standards and then get to work right in the patch. Before this is going to continue and deliver updates to the community, to follow the constantly evolving roadmap with your help to engineer the future. Are you a project or product manager? Wonderful. There are WordPress components and containers that would love for your help running in regular meetings. They can actionable notes and publish and then track and work against or read through the different components which out to the maintenance sounds like or whichever component is most interesting to you. They'll be able to tell you how best you could help them. Help to ensure that WordPress continues to deliver regular updates to the community. Are you a designer? Myrologs. There's a constant need for usability testing, wireframing, prototyping and visual design to ensure that the user experience of reading and writing on WordPress is as seamless and graceful as possible. More than 30% of sites on the web need you. If you find just here, then read through the design handle and follow along in the design channel and slide. Do like WordPress mobile applications. Read out and check out the mobile team and the IRS and the web repos on GitHub for their guide on contributing WordPress apps. The team needs Java, Objective-C or Suite developers as well as designers, weeks, experts and testers to give users a smooth experience on every device. Do you believe in making sure everyone is able to access the web fabulous? Then check out the accessibility team. Read how you can get involved with improving accessibility within WordPress and then follow along in the accessibility channels. Do you speak a language other than English? There are many parts of WordPress that have not yet been fully translated into almost 200 layers that are supported. Start by reading through the GitHub version of the protocols and read through how the translation process works with WordPress. Then start translating and the protocols team welcomes you with open arms. Do you enjoy helping others to learn how to use WordPress? Excellent. Then check out the support team. Read their handbook and read their giving good support section as you will now be on the face of WordPress to users in need. Then follow along in the forum's channel and slide. Everyone knows the answer to something. Answer any question on the forums or in IRC is not only one of the easiest ways to start contributing it's also a great way to learn more about WordPress components you may not be familiar with. Do you enjoy ensuring documentation is updated and accurate? Incredible. Then check out the documentation team. Read through the codex, handbooks and live documentation, develop other friends and help out projects to see which interests you most and then follow along in the doc's channel and slide. Do you love having beautiful functional teams in the team director? Outstanding. Then check out the team review team and read how you can get started with team handbooks. Our team reviews request a team to review and run through the review tests and then follow along in the team review channel and slide. Reviewing teams also shut down their own team development skills. Do you love having secure functional plugins in the plugin editor? Terrific. Then check out the plugins team read through the handbook with specific focus on the get involved section and then follow along in the plugin review channel and slide. If you are a plugin developer subscribe to the plugin review team to keep up with the latest updates and learn about any issues around plugin development. Do you enjoy organizing events? Awesome. The community team oversees official events called work camps, mentorship programs, diversity initiatives, contributor outreach and other ways of opening their community. These all need help, coordination and good. The team would love to hear from you. Take a look for the various handbooks for the team read through the active projects to see which interests you most and then follow along in the community in the channel and slide. Do you just want to build what was besides really then check out the meta team read through the handbook, review the list of current and upcoming projects to see how much interest you and then follow along in the meta channels slide. The meta team is responsible for building and maintaining of the official WordPress dot org websites as well as building tools produced by all the other contributor groups. Do you enjoy teaching others how to use WordPress? Phenomenal. Then check out the training team read through the handbook they're getting started right. Consider whether you want to help with writing, copy editing, testing, auditing, connecting, audio viewing and then follow along in the training channels slide. The training team creates a download or a list of plans and other related materials for instructors to use in a live workshop environment. Do enjoy testing software and trying to find bugs or deficiencies. Fantastic. There are many effects and enhancement tickets that have untested code available that would benefit from being tested appropriately. There are also many platforms that work best supports that would benefit from specific detailed testing and issue login. Take a look at how you could contribute with testing and then dive in with automated testing and beta testing and user testing or one of the many other ways to help with testing. The best thing to join is the test team so with their handbook and follow along in the course of our channel slide. And remember even something as simple as a well-defined bug report is a beautiful thing. Do enjoy video post-production. Sensational. Then check out the WordPress TV team read through their handbook to decide if you're most interested in helping with video editing or managing subtitles or captions and then following along on WPTV channels like giving videos is a great way to learn about WordPress and help the community experience and help the community experience is not required to get involved here. I always the one in the room who is talking about how great WordPress is for your workers, friends and anyone online who listen. Perhaps joining the marketing team is an ideal choice for your participation. The team meets every week on Slack to develop different campaigns to attract new users both individual and commercial. There are four different subgroups within the marketing team. Marketing WordPress to developers marketing to agencies and clients marketing to end users and marketing in the WordPress community. So there is always something new happening within the marketing operations and you could be a part of it all. Just let the team know that you are interested in their first meeting. Did you know that you could work with WordPress from command line? WBCLI is the official command line tool for interacting with and managing your WordPress websites. Contributing to the WBCLI team is not limited to just code. You can contribute in a way that best fits your abilities. By writing tutorials giving a demo to your local meetup helping other users with their support questions or advising their documentation. Read through their handbook and follow where the WBCLI channel is live. Are you interested in best hosting practices, performance, reliability, security or server environments? If you have experience hosting WordPress hosting team would love to have you join read through their handbook and follow along at the hosting community channel. A Tide is a relatively new project with a mission to raise the quality of all plugins and teams and now WordPress is inspired by the project. A rising tide leaves all boats. When we make it easy to write and choose quality code or enough people it will leave all the code across the whole WordPress ecosystem. Tide runs a series of automated tests again every plugin and team in the directory and displays PHP compatibility information and any errors or warnings encountered during testing. When this information becomes available to all users it should help WordPress site owners make better choices about plugins and teams. The project is supported by the Tide and Google automatic and WP engine. If you'd like to learn more with the latest news on the Tide blog follow along on the Tide channel and Slack. Now hopefully anyone can make a meaningful contribution to WordPress just find your own way learn the project philosophy and choose a team or tool that you are most interested in. If you're working on doing that contribute a bit. We're happy to see that. That's it for me. Thank you. Any questions? Okay, so I don't see anything. So maybe we could respond. Are you having any surprises or do you get an intro of this in single-plan? Yeah, if I could answer a good question. On the make WordPress that works there's a specific page called Meetings which lists all the different meetings each team have with a specific time and date. So you could get a quick overview of each team's meeting and we could plan a company or add them to your calendar and show that. Amazing. I still don't see any hints. So before we finish with the scope if you want to I should reveal it. We're closing remarks with Pekka Rackova and one last note if you're coming to launch your project please.