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Although I won’t be attending the WordPress conference WordCamp Europe 2026 in Krakow this year because of other commitments, I built something that could be useful for attendees of it, as well as for future WordCamps.
WordCamp Companion is a tool to plan your WordCamp and guide you through it, as well as for taking notes during sessions.
It is built as a WordPress plugin which you can install to your own WordPress (not in the plugin directory yet so you need to download the ZIP) or use through my.wordpress.net that I talked about in my previous posts.
Use this link to start it directly in my.wordpress.net. Since it is a WordPress hosted in your browser, it is free and private.
The plugin features:
Scroll down to find screenshots and screen recordings of those features.
Let’s start with timeline view. It will automatically update according to the current time and show you when to switch tracks.
In the timeline you can see an “Add a session” in the gaps of your schedule.
You can take notes inline in Markdown-style which you can then export.
Since the sharing link points to my.wordpress.net, a lot needs to happen for this to work:
This is all quite complex just to make it work inside my.wordpress.net. But this offers an experience where you don’t install it on your WordPress just to try it. If you like it, I recommend doing so because then all you need to know is your own URL.
And if you did install it on your own WordPress, you can import it also by just pasting the share link into your companion.
While it is good timing for WordCamp Europe, it also works for multiple (future) WordCamps:
I’ve been working on a capable AI Assistant for WordPress that you can try inside my.wordpress.net. It can help you work out a schedule:
If you’re attending this WordCamp Europe, or other future WordCamps, give the WordCamp Companion a try. You can do it easily and risk-free with this link to start it directly in my.wordpress.net.
By Although I won’t be attending the WordPress conference WordCamp Europe 2026 in Krakow this year because of other commitments, I built something that could be useful for attendees of it, as well as for future WordCamps.
WordCamp Companion is a tool to plan your WordCamp and guide you through it, as well as for taking notes during sessions.
It is built as a WordPress plugin which you can install to your own WordPress (not in the plugin directory yet so you need to download the ZIP) or use through my.wordpress.net that I talked about in my previous posts.
Use this link to start it directly in my.wordpress.net. Since it is a WordPress hosted in your browser, it is free and private.
The plugin features:
Scroll down to find screenshots and screen recordings of those features.
Let’s start with timeline view. It will automatically update according to the current time and show you when to switch tracks.
In the timeline you can see an “Add a session” in the gaps of your schedule.
You can take notes inline in Markdown-style which you can then export.
Since the sharing link points to my.wordpress.net, a lot needs to happen for this to work:
This is all quite complex just to make it work inside my.wordpress.net. But this offers an experience where you don’t install it on your WordPress just to try it. If you like it, I recommend doing so because then all you need to know is your own URL.
And if you did install it on your own WordPress, you can import it also by just pasting the share link into your companion.
While it is good timing for WordCamp Europe, it also works for multiple (future) WordCamps:
I’ve been working on a capable AI Assistant for WordPress that you can try inside my.wordpress.net. It can help you work out a schedule:
If you’re attending this WordCamp Europe, or other future WordCamps, give the WordCamp Companion a try. You can do it easily and risk-free with this link to start it directly in my.wordpress.net.