Hi,

I agree with Stephen. There are lots of blog posts/etc. written out there and 
99.99% are fluff that do not offer anything novel. The type of material I want 
to see promoted by us and linked to from our homepage are items that took 
someone time, effort, and care to create. Works of art -- not a "I wrote 
something with bad grammar and misspellings and used Tinkerpop instead of 
TinkerPop and I mixed Gremlin2 and Gremlin3 together cause I copy/pasted things 
from random other websites… oh, and its a Drupal site and there are random ads 
on the side of the article cause I'm sloppy and just like to get clickthroughs. 
Next up, something random about NodeJS that I read about from someone else 
doing real work. I hope I get a that promotion to 'technology evangelist' -- I 
love my life."

However, as Stephen says, gremlin-users@ is always there for those that want to 
share articles regardless of their quality.

Thanks,
Marko.

http://markorodriguez.com

On Nov 7, 2015, at 10:49 AM, Stephen Mallette <[email protected]> wrote:

> It's always cool to see new things written about TinkerPop. Please share
> them here and on gremlin-users.  I'd say that on a case-by-base basis we
> could decide what would be useful to add to the home page as well as what
> should be tweeted from @apachetinkerpop.
> 
> On Sat, Nov 7, 2015 at 11:01 AM, Dylan Millikin <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> 
>> Hey guys,
>> 
>> Every now and then I get sent various links to articles and stuff relating
>> to Tinkerpop. Probably not nearly as many as there are but nevertheless.
>> I was wondering if it could be interesting to have some means of sharing
>> these articles with the community, or at the very least have some place we
>> could centralize the articles. I realize not all articles are going to be
>> good/interesting but it's a thought.
>> 
>> What do you guys think?
>> 
>> PS: The announcements around OpenCypher spawned a few articles about TP in
>> places I was happy to see. This is an article from OVH the number one
>> hosting provider in Europe, and on their way to the US.
>> 
>> http://hhvm.ovh/entry/graph-query-languages-graphql-opencypher-gremlin-and-sparql
>> 

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