What if we kept the list (and added to it) and then rotated through it on a
monthly (or even weekly) basis, highlighting one application at a time,
with a top bar that says "Coming Next week/month _____" with the name of
whichever application will be featured next, perhaps the same thing below
only 'Last week's featured application ____' and have each one archived, so
that when you click on the name of the program you get whatever was written
up on it when it was last featured. This would give us a reason to write
short articles on each, and a way to ensure that they all stay up-to-date -
as they rotate through the 'featured' section, we'd go back to each set of
developers and ask 'whats changed/new/etc'. It would also allow for some of
the lesser-known applications to be highlighted in turn, and thus allow
them an exposure that they haven't had.

Actually, as I think about this more, I think weekly (or perhaps bi-weekly)
would be better than monthly, so that we could get through them all each
year and thus they could be kept significantly more up-to-date. It would
also give people a reason to come back and checkout the website more often.

Emily

On Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 5:09 AM, Dave Neary <dne...@gnome.org> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> (list only, CCing marketing-list, setting follow-up there)
>
> On 02/13/2012 10:48 AM, Andre Klapper wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 2012-02-12 at 16:22 -0800, Steve Talley wrote:
>>
>>>  I just went to your website, and it wasn't clear to me how to
>>> download Gnome, which I did some months ago, and which provided
>>> Gnumeric and many other free applications.
>>>
>>
>> If you go to http://www.gnome.org/gnome-3/ there is a "Find out how to
>> get GNOME 3" link at the bottom leading to
>> http://www.gnome.org/getting-gnome/ which includes a "Distributions"
>> section.
>>
>> If you would "just" like to download Gnumeric I would recommend
>> http://projects.gnome.org/gnumeric/ as a start.
>>
>
> This raises an interesting point about the GNOME web page - we don't
> currently provide an easy way to find/find out about GNOME applications
> (hosted on gnome.org) which aren't part of the GNOME desktop, outside of
> the few applications we promote on gnome.org/applications
>
> http://projects.gnome.org/ gives an index, looking through the list, some
> interesting apps we could promote are Abiword, Balsa, Banshee, Déjà Dup,
> Dia, F-Spot, GIMP, Gnumeric, GNU Cash, Hamster (although I think this is
> included in GNOME now?), Inkscape, Nanny, PDF Mod, Planner, Rhythmbox,
> Tasque, X-Chat...
>
> Some of these are not hosted on gnome.org - Banshee, GIMP, GNU Cash,
> Inkscape, X-Chat all have their own websites, and for good reason. Some of
> them are on Launchpad (Déjà Dup, for example). And several excellent GNOME
> applications (like Shotwell, SimpleScan, Sound Juicer, for example) don't
> get a mention on the progects.g.o page at all.
>
> It'd be nice if we could help these projects with their SEO and get them
> more visibility as the "headline" GNOME applications - those we know make
> users happy and have great integration and a decent degree of functionality
> and maturity. On that score, I would exclude Dia and GNUCash because they
> haven't kept up with the platform, but the others are all excellent GNOME
> apps.
>
> Perhaps gnome.org/applcations is the place for us to promote these
> applications? How can we do so in a sustainable and SEO-friendly way? We
> already promote some GNOME applications there - including apps like Cheese
> which are included in the desktop but which benefit from people knowing
> what they are.
>
> Cheers,
> Dave.
>
> --
> Dave Neary
> GNOME Foundation member
> dne...@gnome.org
> Jabber: nea...@gmail.com
> --
> marketing-list mailing list
> marketing-list@gnome.org
> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list
>



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