There is always something that amaze me about Jenkins is that there is a
new version each week. I think this is also important to mention, and also
that there is the LTS version for those that want the stable versions. I
think it's worth mention it.
On Oct 31, 2012 7:53 PM, "Kohsuke Kawaguchi" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
> In the past year, when we went to events like SCALE10x and FOSDEM, we had
> some flyers with us and those were very useful as a hand-out.
>
> I believe Tyler created that flyer [1] the day before SCALE10x, but
> because it was so useful, this year we should improve it.
>
> To set the context, in those conferences there are a lot of people who
> didn't know Jenkins, or what the continuous integration was. Audience spans
> many programming languages, too. We are looking for one pager, that works
> both on A4 and letter (stupid US paper sizes.)
>
> From my memories,
>
>  - we need a paragraph about what continuous integration is and why it
>    matters. Maybe a bullet list like the latter half?
>
>  - installation count graph wasn't useful because it doesn't have any
>    labels and it was hard to explain because of the gap in the middle.
>
>  - Whole bunch of numbers need updating
>
>  - Maybe examples of those who are using it? To brag about the
>    popularity?
>
>  - Maybe mention books and hosted services?
>
>
> Any thoughts on what would be useful for promoting Jenkins to new users?
>
> [1] 
> http://strongspace.com/rtyler/**public/brochure.pdf<http://strongspace.com/rtyler/public/brochure.pdf>
> --
> Kohsuke Kawaguchi | CloudBees, Inc. | http://cloudbees.com/
> Try Nectar, our professional version of Jenkins
>

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