Yeah ...
not sure this is not too much ... we should in general have this checked if
such a page would be in line with the ASF bylaws.
Chris
Am 27.01.20, 08:21 schrieb "Julian Feinauer" :
Hi,
I think we should list the companies with a short outline like, e.g.
postgres does it
Hes, but as I understand it you are already doing that, so this should yield
result soon : )
Am 27.01.20, 09:24 schrieb "Christofer Dutz" :
Yeah ...
not sure this is not too much ... we should in general have this checked if
such a page would be in line with the ASF bylaws.
My two cents; you could recommend that companies that has commercial
support to use a unique name on their offering/landing page that gets
picked up by search engines and let the general public know what that word
is...
When I personally am looking for this for project Foo, then "foo -site:
apache
Hi Niclas,
have to admit that I didn't quite understand your suggestion.
Chris
Am 27.01.20, 10:01 schrieb "Niclas Hedhman" :
My two cents; you could recommend that companies that has commercial
support to use a unique name on their offering/landing page that gets
picked up by se
1. On a page /commercial-support you explain the general principle that the
ASF is a vendor neutral place and favors are frowned upon.
2. On that page, recommend the user to instead use their favorite search
engine to look up (e.g) "plc4x_commercial_support" to find companies that
provide such.
3
Ahh ...
ok ...
Now I got you.
Well I would really prefer the "Getting help" part Like on the Druid page,
without the listing of people and their companies, if it was in line with the
ASF bylaws.
The reasoning is that we are also targeting people who are completely new to
Open-Source an
You would have urls in on the page that when you clicked them executed the
search. They can click a link right? One for google, one for duckduckgo,
one for x
On January 27, 2020 at 08:50:08, Christofer Dutz (christofer.d...@c-ware.de)
wrote:
Ahh ...
ok ...
Now I got you.
Well I woul