+1 as well. On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 1:34 PM, Alan Gates <[email protected]> wrote:
> > On Aug 21, 2012, at 11:48 PM, Santhosh M S wrote: > > > > > > > Could we repost the entire blog and indicate that this blog originally > appeared here with the here being a hyperlink to the corporate blog without > mentioning the name of the corporation. > > > > More thoughts? > > I'm +1 on this. > > Alan. > > > > > > Santhosh > > > > > > ________________________________ > > From: Russell Jurney <[email protected]> > > To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> > > Sent: Tuesday, August 21, 2012 7:17 PM > > Subject: Re: Pig as Connector with MongoDB and Node.js > > > > I like the idea of re-blogging the entire thing with a link back to > > the company. Blogs take time, and time is money, so posting to the Pig > > blog first isn't likely. Even personal posts about Pig on my blog > > datasyndrome.com, I'd rather post them on my blog and reblog/link back > > on the Pig blog. This is consistent with common practice. > > > > The real point here is to get common place to recognize, index and > > distribute blog post HOWTOs as documentation. If there's value in the > > post, we should reblog it with a link back. > > > > Russell Jurney http://datasyndrome.com > > > > On Aug 21, 2012, at 7:03 PM, Alan Gates <[email protected]> wrote: > > > >> Are you saying we should only post things to the Pig blog that isn't > already on a corporate blog? I'm not sure that's going to fly, since > companies pay people to write blogs for them. They aren't going to be > excited to publish on Apache first. > >> > >> If we don't feel comfortable posting things on the Pig blog that have > already been posted on a corporate blog we could instead post very short > blogs entries that say something like "A blog on X has been posted over on > http://Y, go take a look". > >> > >> Alan. > >> > >> On Aug 17, 2012, at 3:28 PM, Santhosh M S wrote: > >> > >>> Thanks Alan! I went to that site before my previous email and I did > not find anything and hence the post. > >>> > >>> If the content has no association with any corporation, we should > first post it on the Apache Pig Blog and then cross post it on the > corporate blog. This way, we can decouple the community interests from the > corporate interests. > >>> > >>> Thoughts? > >>> > >>> Santhosh > >>> > >>> > >>> ________________________________ > >>> From: Alan Gates <[email protected]> > >>> To: [email protected] > >>> Sent: Friday, August 17, 2012 3:20 PM > >>> Subject: Re: Pig as Connector with MongoDB and Node.js > >>> > >>> http://blogs.apache.org/pig/ > >>> > >>> We don't have any posts there yet. > >>> > >>> Alan. > >>> > >>> On Aug 17, 2012, at 3:15 PM, Santhosh M S wrote: > >>> > >>>> Before we post the blog, can someone post the URL for the Apache Pig > Blog. Search engine queries are not returning anything useful. > >>>> > >>>> Thanks, > >>>> Santhosh > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> ________________________________ > >>>> From: Jonathan Coveney <[email protected]> > >>>> To: [email protected] > >>>> Sent: Friday, August 17, 2012 12:09 PM > >>>> Subject: Re: Pig as Connector with MongoDB and Node.js > >>>> > >>>> I'm ok with that as long as it is clear it came from a corporate > blog, and > >>>> of course, if people feel uncomfortable they should voice that > opinion. > >>>> > >>>> I think it is good to show that a variety of people use Pig, and I > mean, > >>>> it's not really a surprise that Pig is developed, used, and promoted > by > >>>> corporations :) > >>>> > >>>> 2012/8/17 Alan Gates <[email protected]> > >>>> > >>>>> I'm happy to repost these kinds of blog entries on the Pig blog. > But one > >>>>> thing we as a community need to decide is how we want to handle > references > >>>>> to corporate blogs. My proposal would be that any entries > supporting and > >>>>> promoting Apache Pig should be allowed. But I have an obvious > conflict of > >>>>> interest here, so I'd like to get other people's inputs. > >>>>> > >>>>> Alan. > >>>>> > >>>>> On Aug 16, 2012, at 3:07 PM, Russell Jurney wrote: > >>>>> > >>>>>> I wrote a Pig tutorial to publish data with Mongo and Node.js. > >>>>>> > >>>>>> > >>>>> > http://hortonworks.com/blog/pig-as-connector-part-one-pig-mongodb-and-node-js > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Is it possible to reblog on the Pig blog? > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Russell Jurney > >>>>>> twitter.com/rjurney > >>>>>> [email protected] > >>>>>> datasyndrome.com > > -- *Note that I'm no longer using my Yahoo! email address. Please email me at [email protected] going forward.*
