Mark Jaquith is a staff software engineer and long-time web developer with 20+ years of experience building publishing platforms, custom web apps, and WordPress tooling. A decade as a WordPress Lead Developer and ongoing ownership of Covered Web Services reflect deep expertise in PHP, deployment automation, and large-scale site architecture, while recent work favors modern stacks like Laravel and SvelteKit. He combines hands-on backend and DevOps skills—Capistrano tasks, nginx/PHP-FPM orchestration, multisite/CDN support—with front-end contributions to projects like Alpine.js, where he improved directives and added robust intersection tests. Mark also brings strong QA and test automation chops, adding Cypress suites and CI workflows to core WordPress tooling such as CMB2. Based in Tampa, he pairs practical business training with an engineer’s eye for reliable, maintainable publishing systems.
20 years of coding experience
18 years of employment as a software developer
Business Administration and Management General, Business Administration and Management General at University of Florida - Warrington College of Business
A toolkit for creating professional WordPress deployments
Role in this project:
Back-end & DevOps Engineer
Contributions:57 commits, 1 push, 1 comment in 4 years 10 months
Contributions summary:Mark primarily contributed to the backend functionality of a WordPress deployment toolkit. They introduced features like multisite uploads and a CDN plugin to enhance the platform's capabilities. Furthermore, they developed Capistrano tasks to automate deployment processes. These included tasks for nginx, PHP-FPM, and memcached management.
Basic layout of a WordPress Git repository. I use this as a base when creating a new repo.
Role in this project:
Back-end & DevOps Engineer
Contributions:67 commits, 9 PRs, 46 pushes in 10 years 7 months
Contributions summary:Mark focused on improving the WordPress skeleton repository's configuration and deployment process. They standardized line endings in a core file and enhanced the `wp-config.php` file by adding features for local development, production database tokens, and integration with Memcached. The user also added support for staging environments by including staging domains and created a sample local configuration file to guide developers. These changes aimed to make the repository more flexible and suitable for diverse deployment scenarios.
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Mark Jaquith - Staff Software Engineer at Covered Web Services