• Adulting

    Drove without swearing: (I can’t drive, so…)

    Did not binge-watch: Netflix is losing its appeal on me; not sure why. However, “binge-reading manga/manhwa,” THEN…

    Fixed it myself: Not… sure…? Does “battling cockroach and spray it to its demise” count?

    Made my bed: LOL LOL LOL.

    Matched my socks: AS LONG AS IT DOESN’T SMELL (yet) IT STILL COUNTS OKAY.

    Took only one selfie: I rarely take selfie, so…

    Didn’t spend all the money: Dang it, Shopee!

    Did not have ramen for dinner: I consider myself successful on this because I usually have ramen for lunch.

    Didn’t lose my keys: I’m paranoid whenever it’s related to keys.

  • How to grow my blog or website? Water it daily and enough sunshine? Don’t feed it after midnight?

    Things usually pretty quiet on June – August because it’s summer break on most part of the world. I remember last year (2019), chat and e-mails were ghastly quiet, we even got chances to play tic-tac-toes on our Slack channel and some slapbot (a bot that you can send command to, uh, slap your colleague on the channel.)

    Due to the pandemic, things look pretty constantly crowded. Folks staying at home and preferring to do things from one location to minimize risk starting to venture into website or blog building.

    The latter was pretty “easy” (blogging.) You open a blogging service, including wordpress.com, create a blog, and voila, you have a blog.

    The first one — building a website — not so. Even for seasoned veteran on website building, creating a website means you have to think about so many factors within the website. What kind of contents you want to have on the website? If it’s an online shop, what kind of products do you want to sell? What kind of color scheme that you want to use? Brand image? Should I blog too? How about SEO?

    And speaking about SEO, even bloggers have the same questions — how do I build my online presence? I’m blogging for my livelihood, how do I expand and monetize that?

    And trust me, those questions are asked on daily basis — and no, quite the contrary of folks might think — those questions are not silly questions! Just yesterday, I had a user who wanted to know more about WordPress.com themes and how to improve their website’s theme. They even asked if we can recommend some design books for them to check about WordPress theme — it’s super sweet! We discussed about color palette, color scheme, and accessibility. I learned a lot from their questions, especially on being mindful in regards to website readability and navigation.

    If your website is hosted in WordPress.com (or maybe even it’s hosted anywhere? It should be okay, though! The more the merrier,) you are invited to join WordPress.com Growth Summit, our first ever summit for bloggers, creators, and business owners. You can learn and join sessions with WordPress.com product experts (I SEE ZELDMAN ON THE LIST!) and you can even meet our Happiness Engineers (in case you are sick of me ?)

    If you want to check more about WordPress.com Growth Summit, feel free to visit the website here: WordPress.com Growth Summit or read the team’s blog post on The First-Ever WordPress.com Growth Summit Is Coming, and You Won’t Want to Miss It

    Interested on learning more about WordPress.com but Growth Summit is not your thing?

    That’s okay! WordPress.com also have free daily webinar — yes, DAILY. I don’t know how my colleagues able to pull that off. DAILY. WEBINAR. DAILY. I have to drag my lazy bum just to blog once a week — that folks can join. The topic ranges from Quick Start on blogging to WooCommerce (can I have an amen from aspiring business owners?)

    If you unable to join the webinar, you can still see the recordings on Automattic’s Youtube channel here.

    To know more about the webinar, feel free to check it out on its website here: WordPress.com Webinar

  • On reporting and supporting

    When I just started working in Automattic, I always terrified of bug reporting. Mostly because I feel like I’m not in a good position to report anything, and even if I did, I’m scared of the prospect of other folks in the company — the more experienced ones — looking at me while asking, “what do you know?”

    And I can’t be more wrong than that. On the last year’s Grand Meetup, I sat with folks from different divisions and teams during breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Whenever I mentioned that I’m a Happiness Engineer (Support), they always exclaimed, “you are from Happiness! Can you share with me what are the things that we can improve? Do you happen to see some stuck issues that you want to be fixed immediately?”

    Soon, I learned on how to report bugs on GitHub. I have so many help and encouragements from developers and friends from different divisions. They shared some tips and insights on how to report bug properly so the developers or folks in charge would know what to do next.

    4W1H

    I omitted the “Who” because that’s not the focus on bug reporting. The “who” would be pretty obvious: The one who reported the bug.

    The What. What is it? What’s happening? Something is not working, something is broken. Something needs to be fixed.

    The Where. Where did it happen? Is there any specific area where you found the bug? Is it on the editor, is it on your live site?

    The When. Is it intermittent? Is it constant? When did it started? Has it been long?

    The Why. As silly as this sounds, you can share more on why you report the issue. Maybe you feel this is actually enhancement that can improve the process, maybe you feel some flows can be reduced for effieciency. And most of times, this is a bug that needs to be addressed ASAP because it’s destructive.

    The How. The most important question: How to replicate the issue? You can share the steps as detailed as possible. For example, first step, click this link. Second step, click that button. Third step, add this element. Fourth step, see everything burn in flames.

    Set the goal

    Once you can determine the 4W1H, set the goal. What you expected and the reality/what actually happened.

    ”So! I clicked this button and that button. I expected a pop-up will appear. However, in reality, nothing appearing, and I even see an error message!”

    It gives clear goal and expectation of what should happened so we can narrow down on what went wrong/the cause.

    We trust you, we are trying to replicate the issue

    I noticed a behavior where some folks discussing an issue with Support team and they usually mentioned, “I might sound super silly right now, but I swear before I saw this error message,” “I really hope you don’t take me as a rambling mess, but I definitely had a trouble before,” or, “I’m so sorry for wasting your time, but I did saw an error on my page earlier today.”

    No, you are not wasting Support’s time. Even after so many questions from us and the error suddenly disappeared, please rest assured, we appreciate you reaching out to Support. That great relief when you see the problem disappear? Yeah, we feel it too. Even when we literally go, “… ??” in front of our laptop because, ”I swear to everything holy in this world, I haven’t done anything! So, uh… Yay?“

    Sometimes folks might feel bit overwhelmed when Support asks questions and some might forgot the details or they might afraid to overshare (“is this relevant? Should I mention about this weird blinking text on my site? I’m curious about this weird letters on my site, should I mention about it too?”) That’s completely okay! Any details are appreciated. Even when you feel like you are missing something, that’s okay. Support is there to check for the gaps and fill in the details. Once Support has the general picture, we can narrow down the issue and assist you faster.

Nindya’s quick blurbs

  • Saw this site mentioned the other day on Slack: neocities.org.

    Scroll down and you will see “Featured Sites”. Never knew it brings back early 2000s, and it makes me so, so happy.

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