Happy holidays - and a thank you to the TYPO3 community
Have the article read aloud.
The year is drawing to a close and I would like to take the time to wish you all a relaxing Christmas season.
We all know how hectic the last few weeks before the holidays can be, especially in our industry where deadlines and project completions are often left to the last minute.
I hope you find the time to switch off, surround yourself with the people who are important to you and recharge your batteries for the year ahead. Use this well-deserved break to enjoy the little things and recharge your batteries for new challenges.
I would like to thank each and every one of you for your trust, inspiring projects and dedicated collaboration. Your willingness to acquire new knowledge and expand your skills motivates me in my work every day.
I am keen to continue supporting you in the coming year with practical and flexible learning opportunities so that you can implement your TYPO3 projects even more efficiently. Our common goal remains not only to offer solutions, but also to show you how you can find solutions yourself.
Let's see the holidays as a well-deserved break that will give us new perspectives and fresh ideas for the tasks ahead. I look forward to being there for you again in the new year with full energy and reliability.Enjoy the Christmas season, stay healthy and have a good start to the new year!
Best regards
Wolfgang Wagner
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Hi, I'm Wolfgang.
I have been working with TYPO3 since 2006. Not in theory, but in real projects with real deadlines. I've probably had the problems you're having three times already.
At some point, I started putting my knowledge into video courses. Not because I like being in front of the camera, but because I kept hearing the same questions over and over again. There are now hundreds of videos. Every single one was the result of a specific question from a specific project.
What makes me different from a YouTube tutorial: I not only know the solution, but also the context. Why something works. When it doesn't work. And which mistakes you can avoid because I've already made them.
My participants use me as a sparring partner. Not in the sense of "call me anytime", but like this: You come to the live session with a specific problem, post your question in the community or watch the appropriate video. And get an answer that works because it comes from practical experience.
As a member of the TYPO3 Education & Certification Committee, I make sure that the certification exams are kept up to date. What is tested there flows directly into my courses.