Iain--
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Not all of these actually run Pyramid, but yes, some do.
Yes, it would be nice to have such a list. Any volunteers to help
compile and maintain the list?
- C
>
> On Tue, Feb 14, 2012 at 6:44 PM, Iain Duncan
> <iaindun...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Wondering if such a thing is around? I am stuck doing a pitch
> to a committee on why we are using Pyramid and not Drupal, and
> it would be helpful to have some hard numbers and/or lists of
> high profile users to go along with my material. SQLAlchemy
> has such a thing on their site, might be worth having if there
> isn't one already. ( googling it didn't find one, but it could
> be 'that egyptian problem' again. ;-)
>
>
>
> Thanks
> Iain
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Well there's a big list of logos on http://www.pylonsproject.org/
On Tue, 2012-02-14 at 19:47 -0600, Michael Merickel wrote:Not all of these actually run Pyramid, but yes, some do.
> Well there's a big list of logos on http://www.pylonsproject.org/
Yes, it would be nice to have such a list. Any volunteers to help
compile and maintain the list?
Basically, I'd just like to suggest that someone do it whatever way they
please then get out of their way. I don't have any particular
presentation suggestions, but we can make our resources available to
present the data in whatever form necessary (the pylonsproject.org
website, the github wiki, whatever).
- C
I think we should collect them along with their logo in a good format (and normalize them for presentation) and with a quote or some description if possible. Then we should roll them up on the web site, that'll become a one page teaser site soon, and linked back to a dedicated page on the doc site under pylonsrtd project. I can help with this as it's kind of mandatory to have this information, and would definitely accept any help given from Iain or others.
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>Wondering if such a thing is around? I am stuck doing a pitch to a
>committee on why we are using Pyramid and not Drupal
"It's a trap!"
Seriously, any discussion that includes, "Why are you using X,
and not Y?" should be followed with, "Y must be useful,
otherwise you would not suggest it. Why do you think we should
use Y?" It's a useful tactic to learn more about the client and
their project requirements.
I welcome these discussions and never disparage any suggested
tool. Yet I find comparison of tools to be tedious,
unproductive, and, frankly, ignored. Ultimately the client will
hire you for your competency and professionalism, not for what
technology you use.
I could spread myself really thin and learn a little bit about a
lot of technologies, or I could focus on only a few technologies
and be an highly effective expert and do that well. Now if the
client has an expert in Y, then it may be a good idea to
collaborate on a small pilot project to see how we could work
together through the use of APIs. Sometimes the best way to
deal with the "Why X, not Y" question is to say that you are
technologically agnostic and welcome the opportunity to work
with experts in Y.
--steve
--steve
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