Indira Biswas, a QA engineer from Akola, India, didn't think open source was for her. She showed up anyway. Her HeroPress essay traces the path from watching others at a school computer lab to contributing to WordPress Core and co-leading at WordCamp Asia. https://heropress.com/?p=8509 #WordPressShowcase
WordCamp US 2026 starts with the people who help bring it to life. If you care about WordPress, community, and creating meaningful events, this is your chance to get involved. Applications are now open for organizers. No location or prior organizing experience required. Apply by April 3, 2026: https://us.wordcamp.org/2026/call-for-organizers/ #WordPress #WCUS
WordPress 7.0 Release Candidate 2 is now available. The final release is scheduled for April 9, 2026. You can test using the WordPress Beta Tester plugin, a direct download, WP-CLI, or directly in your browser via WordPress Playground. RC2 also marks the hard string freeze for translators. Test it in a safe environment and report any issues. https://wp.me/pZhYe-5hO #WordPress
WP Packages is a new community-funded, open source Composer repository for WordPress plugins and themes, built as an independent alternative to WPackagist. It supports Composer v2's metadata-url protocol, syncs every 5 minutes, and is roughly 17x faster on cold dependency resolves. https://wp.me/pZhYe-5g2 #WordPress
WordCamp Asia 2026 is heading to Mumbai, April 9–11. If you run a local business, there are real, practical ways to get involved: an accessible sponsorship tier, free technical help at the Happiness Bar, and direct connections with international visitors looking for local services. https://wp.me/pgnY82-2Mk #WCAsia
WordPress 7.0 Release Candidate 1 is here and ready for testing. More than 134 updates since Beta 5, a new AI Connectors screen, and a Command Palette in the admin bar. The final release is April 9, 2026. Give it a try in a test environment and share what you find. https://wp.me/pZhYe-5gh #WordPress
TEDxAthens, Greece's longest-running TEDx event, runs on WordPress. The site is built on the Block Editor with custom block patterns and modular layouts that organize a large archive of talks, speaker profiles, podcasts, and event editions. It's a good example of WordPress handling the demands of a global brand with an active community. https://wp.me/pmwwI-3pL #WordPressShowcase
WordCamp Europe 2026 is happening in Kraków, and the city's history runs deep. A new post on the WCEU blog introduces 5 symbols that define the city: a fire-breathing dragon, a braided street bread sold since the 14th century, a costumed festival figure, the famous market square pigeons, and the floral folk patterns of the Małopolska region. https://wp.me/pgyJ7n-1ci
#WCEU
WordPress 7.0 will introduce real-time collaboration in the block editor, built on an HTTP polling sync provider and CRDT data storage. The March developer roundup also covers new WP-CLI commands, AI provider packages, and the first wave of Dev Notes. https://developer.wordpress.org/news/?p=5940 #WordPressDevelopment
Food Banks Mississauga uses WordPress to connect their community with food, support, and volunteer opportunities. The site was designed around real user data and accessibility needs, with clear paths for donating, finding food, and navigating key resources. https://wp.me/pmwwI-3pG #WordPressShowcase
If you design for the web, WordCamp Asia 2026 has a post worth your time. It outlines why the event is relevant for designers: real production constraints, accessibility, inclusive design at scale, and how to get involved with the WordPress Design Team. The event runs April 9–11 in Mumbai. https://wp.me/pgnY82-2qd #WCAsia