Python Forum
Adam Tauno Williams
awilliam at whitemice.org
Thu Jun 3 07:20:48 EDT 2010
On Thu, 2010-06-03 at 03:16 -0700, Pierre Quentel wrote:
> I agree that it's not efficient to split the community by creating
> another forum. But we can't ignore the fact that c.l.p's activity has
> been decreasing in the last years :
> 2000 42971
> 2001 55265
> 2002 56774
> 2003 64521
> 2004 55929
> 2005 58864
> 2006 59664
> 2007 49105
> 2008 48722
> 2009 44111
> which certainly doesn't match the popularity of the language itself
I'm not sure that means what you imply it does. I'm involved in several
projects and technical groups. List traffic is down across-the-board.
I remember [physical] UG [of various flavors] meetings of 30+ people,
now you average ~10. I see two factors: [a] much better documentation,
more traditional training, and simply that many of the hard nuts have
been cracked. It is much easier to develop [regardless of language] or
sys-admin than it was ~5 years ago. [b] The "cool" has moved onto
something else. Don't dismiss this factor, it was certainly visible in
the UG space. "The Internet" and "IT" were the *it* thing, Open Source
and the web were a intriguing and mysterious novelties. Now they are
mainstream, ho hum. Coolness seekers have moved on to graze in other
fields [SEM and SM mostly].
In reference to [a] there are several very good Python texts available
and the online documentation is fair to decent.
> So the OP's initiative should be an incentive to think on the format
> of the interaction between all the range of Python users, from newbees
> to gurus. We are in the 2.0 era, with social networks all over the
> place using a pleasant interface,
I suppose that is a matter of taste; I hear no shortage of complaints
that Facebook et al are complicated and hard to use.
--
Adam Tauno Williams <awilliam at whitemice.org> LPIC-1, Novell CLA
<http://www.whitemiceconsulting.com>
OpenGroupware, Cyrus IMAPd, Postfix, OpenLDAP, Samba
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