Community Summit 2017 recaps will be posted here soon

As a few weeks have passed since Community Summit 2017, we’ve gathered some notes of the discussions that took place during the Summit (although we haven’t received notes of all discussions yet).

We’ve sent the notes we received so far to the respective team leads, and asked them to publish a post with their recaps on this make/summit p2 blog (if you haven’t being pinged already, this means that we haven’t received notes related to your team’s topics).

The Community Summit team would like to ask the team leads for the following:

A) If you haven’t published already a recap in your team’s p2:
Please publish a p2 post on this make/summit blog with a recap of all the discussions related to your team at the Summit.

or

B) If you have published already a recap in your team’s p2:
Please publish a p2 post on this make/summit blog with a link to that published recap.

Pinging some team reps who attended:
Rian Rietveld: @rianrietveld – AccessibilityAccessibility Accessibility (commonly shortened to a11y) refers to the design of products, devices, services, or environments for people with disabilities. The concept of accessible design ensures both “direct access” (i.e. unassisted) and “indirect access” meaning compatibility with a person’s assistive technology (for example, computer screen readers). (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accessibility)
Daniel Bachhuber – @danielbachhuber – CLICLI Command Line Interface. Terminal (Bash) in Mac, Command Prompt in Windows, or WP-CLI for WordPress.
Jonathan Desrosiers and Adam Silverstein – @desrosj @adamsilverstein – CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress.
Mike Schroder – @mikeschroder – Hosting
Jon Kenshino – @kenshino – Docs
Cate Huston – @catehstn – Mobile
Mika Epstein – @ipstenu – Plugins
James Huff – @macmanx – Support
Ulrich – @grapplerulrich – Themes
Tammie Lister – @karmatosed – Design
Francesca Marrano and Hugh Lashbrooke – @francina @hlashbrooke – Community
Petya Raykovska – @petya – Polyglots

Note: If you’re not an Author in this p2 already, please pingPing The act of sending a very small amount of data to an end point. Ping is used in computer science to illicit a response from a target server to test it’s connection. Ping is also a term used by Slack users to @ someone or send them a direct message (DM). Users might say something along the lines of “Ping me when the meeting starts.” @andrescifuentesr or @milana_cap and they will give you access to it.

Thank you all! 🙂