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From: Jim C. Nasby <[email protected]>
To: Josh Berkus <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Cc: Michael Dean <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [HACKERS] Toward A Positive Marketing Approach.
Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 14:03:13 -0500
Message-ID: <[email protected]> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <[email protected]>
References: <[email protected]>
	<[email protected]>

Dropping -hackers.

On Fri, May 19, 2006 at 10:18:00AM -0700, Josh Berkus wrote:
> Michael,
> 
> Howdy, glad to see you came back.
> 
> > 1.  We should treat all marketing efforts by hackers/programmers as
> > social bugs.  Get some marketing pros (debuggers) in on this, or the
> > popularity of postgresql will continue to pale in the real world.
> 
> Not really in line with PostgreSQL's "personality".   This could work for 
> OpenOffice, but not here.  PG is a very engineering-central project and there 
> aren't many people who want to change that.
> 
> Your other comments have been mostly answered, but:
> 
> > 3. Reward existing FOSS projects that make sensible provision to
> > accomodate postgresql in preference to other more "commercial" db's.
> > Free links, mention in newsletter, listing on websites, whatever it
> > takes to start pulling other open source communities behind postgresql.
> > A good example is bitweaver.org, a great integration project, very
> > professional, helpful to small businesses, but needs some promotional help.
> >
> > 4. Stop being too cheap.  Money Talks!  Offer to PAY premiums to major
> > OSS aps who don't do pg, or don't do it well enough.  Like Compierre,
> > like Drupal.  
> 
> Actually, what projects who don't have a bias against PostgreSQL mostly need 
> is developer time to help them with code.  Drupal already supports Postgres; 
> they need DBAs to help them be faster/better on Postgres.   They are in the 
> same boat with lots of other projects, so much so that there is more demand 
> than there are PG volunteers.
> 
> If you have Postgres DBA experience, I'll be happy to hook you up with 
> someone.

Even better would be if we had someplace where projects looking for help
could go to find volunteers. I think there's a lot of people who use
PostgreSQL and would like to contribute back to the community, but
aren't really able to help from a code standpoint. This would be a great
way for them to get involved.

> Other projects need even more intensive coding help.  OpenOffice, for example, 
> doesn't offer the Postgres driver by default because it's still too buggy.  
> That would be solvable with money, but $1000 to $2000, not $50.
> 
> I do think that we could use a list of what other mature OSS projects support 
> PostgreSQL reasonably well already.  This is pretty much a data collection 
> effort; are you volunteering for it?   We could use it.

+1
-- 
Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant      [email protected]
Pervasive Software      http://pervasive.com    work: 512-231-6117
vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf       cell: 512-569-9461



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