Differences between revisions 5 and 30 (spanning 25 versions)
Revision 5 as of 2006-08-17 01:31:47
Size: 1866
Editor: adsl-68-95-150-255
Comment:
Revision 30 as of 2006-12-07 09:51:11
Size: 4845
Editor: JeffRush
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
Existing material appears (also) at EvangelismSupportMaterials and PromotingPythonBof. ----
For active discussion on advocating the use of Python, please join the [http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/advocacy Advocacy mailing list] and visit the [http://advocacy.python.org/getinvolved Advocacy - Get Involved!] site.
----

Greetings! I'm the PythonAdvocacyCoordinator. You can reach me via email at [[MailTo(advocate AT python DOT org)]]. I'm always glad to hear ideas or corrections.

Want to help with some writing? Check out our list of whitepaper/flyer AdvocacyWritingTasks or magazine ArticleIdeas.

== Advocacy Resources ==

=== Python Advocacy Kits ===

 * [wiki:/CollegeStudentKit College Student's Python Advocacy Kit] (being developed)
 * [wiki:/ItDepartmentKit IT Department Python Advocacy Kit] (being developed)
 * [wiki:/UniversityEducatorKit University Educator's Python Advocacy Kit] (being developed)
 * [wiki:/K12EducatorKit K-12 Educator's Python Advocacy Kit] (being developed)
 * [wiki:/ResearchLabKit Research Lab Python Advocacy Kit] (being developed)

=== Reusable/Retargetable Teaching Materials ===

 * [wiki:/SlidePresentations Excellent Slide Presentations] - we're looking for the best out of many
 * [wiki:/ClassHandouts Class Handouts]

=== Other Resources ===

 * [http://advocacy.python.org/@@/collaterals/ Document Library]
 * WellKnownPythonPrograms - you may already be using Python!
 * LanguageComparisons - Python Compared to Other Languages
 * [http://pythonology.org/ Pythonology: A Site for Python Advocacy] (success stories, how-tos, press list, and more)
 * [http://www.python.org/doc/Summary.html Executive Summary] ("What is Python?")
 * [http://py-howto.sourceforge.net/advocacy/advocacy.html Python Advocacy HOWTO]
 * [http://www.cafepy.com/article/53/ Python Marketing] Yet another article collecting quotes and facts pointing to explosive growth of Python in the enterprise.
 * PythonAdvocacyInScientificComputation
 * And if you think that Python programs run slowly, please read PythonSpeed where some of the issues related to speed are discussed.
 * Python23Release (preparation of PR and marketing message for Python 2.x Release)

Please send me [[MailTo(advocate AT python DOT org)]] any files that might be useful for giving out at user groups or business meetings.

Existing material appears (also) at ["evangelism_support_materials"] and PromotingPythonBof.
Line 4: Line 42:
== Magazines that Accept Technical Articles == == General Notes ==

Advocacy is the process of letting people know what Python is
good at, and drawing them into using the language. The most effective
forms of advocacy lure users to the language by impressing them
with results, rather than brow beating or lecturing them on language design.

Published articles that answer the question "how do I solve X with Python?" are a good way to get people interested.

One goal for writing articles might be to develop a library of
How-Tos for Python. Much information exists, but it has not been
collected for convenient access from python.org (or another central location), and there are
certainly gaps in covering key strengths of Python.

A collection of [http://python.org/about/success Python Success Stories] already exists. These are also useful, usually by helping engineers convince their bosses that Python is worthy of attention. But success stories tend to be lean on "how-to" style information, so they do not offer a convenient path to get new users working with Python.

Since the goal for advocacy is to highlight Python's strengths, [http://wingware.com/python this Key Strengths list] may be useful.

== Print and Online Magazines that Accept Technical Articles ==

We would like to focus on those magazines outside the Python community, in order to reach those who don't know about us. Also there are many magazines that accept press releases that do not accept articles. We need those that welcome articles.
Line 9: Line 67:
 * [http://www.mactech.com MacTech Magazine] [http://www.mactech.com/editorial/writersguide.html Author Guidelines]
 * [http://www.onlamp.com/python/ O'Reilly Python Dev Center] -- Inside Python community in a sense but O'Reilly gets a lot of exposure.
 * [http://www.infoworld.com/ Infoworld]
 * [http://www.artima.com/ Artima Developer]
 * [http://www.intelligententerprise.com/ Intelligent Enterprise]
Line 10: Line 73:
== Magazine Articles About Python I Would Like to See == == Electronic Magazines that Accept Technical Articles ==
Line 12: Line 75:
 * Python and Relational Databases

   Talk about the DB-API that Python has standardized on, and how easy it is to write conventional SQL. Then move into one of the ORMs for Python, perhaps SQLObject or SQLAlchemy. Discuss how data types are automatically converted, and how cross-platform the solution is. Highlight the different database engines supported, both open source and commercial.

 * Python and Object Databases

   Talk about how dynamic languages make a good match for object databases, with seamless serialization. Provide an overview of how an object database works, but focus on the end-developer and not the underlying mechanisms. Cover how the databases retain transaction support, and to what degree they provide support for the principles of ACID. Discuss the popular ZODB, Durus and APE frameworks, their tradeoffs (e.g. read-mostly usage, transaction rates) and the fact that they can be used standalone without the baggage of Zope or Quixote. Cover their lack of granular security and user identities at the database API level.
 * [http://arstechnica.com Ars Technica] [http://arstechnica.com/site/styleguide.ars Author Guidelines]
Line 21: Line 78:



For active discussion on advocating for Python, please join the mailing list at [http://wingware.com/mailman/listinfo/marketing-python]

WellKnownPythonPrograms - you may already be using Python!
----


For active discussion on advocating the use of Python, please join the [http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/advocacy Advocacy mailing list] and visit the [http://advocacy.python.org/getinvolved Advocacy - Get Involved!] site.


Greetings! I'm the PythonAdvocacyCoordinator. You can reach me via email at MailTo(advocate AT python DOT org). I'm always glad to hear ideas or corrections.

Want to help with some writing? Check out our list of whitepaper/flyer AdvocacyWritingTasks or magazine ArticleIdeas.

Advocacy Resources

Python Advocacy Kits

Reusable/Retargetable Teaching Materials

Other Resources

Please send me MailTo(advocate AT python DOT org) any files that might be useful for giving out at user groups or business meetings.

Existing material appears (also) at ["evangelism_support_materials"] and PromotingPythonBof. Note [http://psf.pollenation.net/cgi-bin/trac.cgi/ticket/160].

General Notes

Advocacy is the process of letting people know what Python is good at, and drawing them into using the language. The most effective forms of advocacy lure users to the language by impressing them with results, rather than brow beating or lecturing them on language design.

Published articles that answer the question "how do I solve X with Python?" are a good way to get people interested.

One goal for writing articles might be to develop a library of How-Tos for Python. Much information exists, but it has not been collected for convenient access from python.org (or another central location), and there are certainly gaps in covering key strengths of Python.

A collection of [http://python.org/about/success Python Success Stories] already exists. These are also useful, usually by helping engineers convince their bosses that Python is worthy of attention. But success stories tend to be lean on "how-to" style information, so they do not offer a convenient path to get new users working with Python.

Since the goal for advocacy is to highlight Python's strengths, [http://wingware.com/python this Key Strengths list] may be useful.

We would like to focus on those magazines outside the Python community, in order to reach those who don't know about us. Also there are many magazines that accept press releases that do not accept articles. We need those that welcome articles.

Electronic Magazines that Accept Technical Articles

CategoryAdvocacy

Advocacy (last edited 2009-10-30 02:22:47 by panix3)

Unable to edit the page? See the FrontPage for instructions.