Automattic, Travel

2014 Travel

Automattic’s job page says that you should expect to travel four to five weeks out of the year, if you join us. That’s actually a really good rule of thumb. Of course it varies from person to person, but with meetups alone you’re looking at a minimum of three weeks. I ended up spending a bit more time on the road, so I thought I should write a short recap.

In 2013 I traveled about 79,000 miles which—not being used to that much travel—felt like a lot. So going into the new year, I planned on reducing it a little, only going to meetups and local WordCamps. That was not what happened however.

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Automattic

Office For Today

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At Automattic’s Grand Meetup, one of the activities offered was Skydiving. It felt like the perfect opportunity to do something completely outside of my comfort zone, so I signed up! And who would have known, I ended up enjoying it a lot more than anticipated! Please excuse my language after landing.

Automattic, WordPress.org

Konstant Change

When I joined Automattic almost two years ago, it was my first opportunity to work with WordPress full time. Up until I joined, WordPress was only a hobby, though I did some client projects and administered a multisite network at the company I worked for during college.

I joined as a Theme Wrangler, and managed to release only eight themes on WordPress.com during my stint with the Theme Team. The primary reason was probably my WordPress.org focus, working on Twenty Thirteen and Twenty Fourteen, and submitting and maintaining our free themes in/to the Theme Repository. The two default themes were some of my proudest work, and among the most rewarding projects that I had the chance to work on. Especially Twenty Thirteen since I got to do the majority of the development work on it, before it hit Core for breaking.

In December of 2013, after a little over a year with the Theme Team, I switched to a more development-heavy role, working on improving the user experience around finding and selecting themes on WordPress.com. It was a great learning experience for me, predominantly working on a Backbone application, with some REST API sprinkled in between, and creating an internal Theme Utility API (around WordPress.com’s theme showcase) along the way.

Today, I’m changing roles again, joining a new team at Automattic. Alongside of Andrew Ozz, Gary Pendergast, and others, I will be contributing to WordPress Core full-time! I can not put into words how happy this makes me and how excited I am!

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Image courtesy of Josh Root.

Image courtesy of Josh Root.

As part of Automattic’s Grand Meetup this year, I got to go to the last game of the San Francisco Giants this season. We had early entrance tickets to hang out in one of their lounges and watch warm ups, when I had my tweet featured on the Giants’ scoreboard!

Automattic, Sports

Featured on the SF Giants Scoreboard

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Automattic

Automatticians at WordCamp Los Angeles

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The more WordCamps I visit, the better of an experience each becomes! WordCamp Montréal was no exception and I had great conversations, met local WordPress developers, fellow Automatticians, and even merged an attendee’s pull request for Underscores while volunteering at the Happiness Bar!

It’s really the people and the interactions that makes WordCamps outstanding to me. Everyone was super-open and approachable, and the organizers did a great job putting it together. I really wish I would have made better travel arrangements so I could have stayed a little longer, but that won’t happen to me again! 🙂 Continue reading

Automattic, Conferences, WordPress

WordCamp Montréal

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