WPwatercooler
Weekly Watercooler Discussions about WordPress and it’s community.
For the last 10+ years Jason, Sé and Cosper bring together people from the community to discuss WordPress and how it is changing our hobbies, businesses and our lives. This is built as a light-hearted edutainment show where education is an accidental byproduct. You’ll learn something in between the silly banter of these decade old friends sharing their wisdom on the internet for free.
WPwatercooler is streamed live to various social media channels and is made available after the show in the form of an audio podcast. Videos can be played any time on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Twitch.
Live Fridays at 11:00 am Pacific
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With many of us working from home were joining the collective of in-home workers that have been doing this for years. Join us as we discuss this new reality. A dedicated place to work in your home Buy headphones, get good ones Play a great playlist Stay focused Take breaks Use a Pomodoro timer Jason
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This week on WPwatercooler we discussed WordPress 5.5 and its proposed WP Auto-updates feature currently in plugin form.
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This week on WPwatercooler we discussed WordPress 5.4 some recent plugins to be rolled into core and Google’s involvement in it.
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This week on WPwatercooler we discussed WordPress security
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This week on WPwatercooler we’re discussing how you can get the most from your favorite WordPress form plugins.
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What is it, how do you go about it, how much should it cost, why it is important
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This week on WPwatercooler we’re discussing has WordPress in 2020 and the article by Impress.org “What to Watch for in WordPress in 2020”
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This week on WPwatercooler we’re talking about how to setup your new webhost after getting out of the bad relationship with your old one. We’re starting new and this is Everything.
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This week on WPwatercooler we’re how to move your WordPress website to a new and better webhost. thank u, next!
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This week on WPwatercooler we’re discussing WordPress webhosts and if and when you should move to a new one. This is part 1 of 3 of our “Grande guide to changing WordPress web hosts.”










