El lun, 29 ene 2024 a las 20:24, Felipe Oliveira Carvalho
(<felipe...@gmail.com>) escribió:
>
> > I have found Twitter an extremely effective way for an open-source
> project to communicate with the “exo-community” — people who are interested
> in the project but not so invested that they join the email list. An open
> source project needs to perform pretty much all of the functions of a
> for-profit company, and Twitter fulfills the marketing function. Clearly
> Twitter is not what it used to be, but I don’t know what, if anything, has
> replaced it.
>
> +1.

I also agree with this view. I find it a very good communication tool
for lots of users that are interested in the project but not that
close.

I am happy to tweet about the releases of Arrow, blog posts, etcetera
on the official account.

Raúl

>
> Unfortunately, all the alternatives to Twitter haven't reached the tipping
> point yet. Saw some people trying to push tech content on Threads but the
> audience is simply not there yet. @ApacheArrow has 12K followers on Twitter
> making it a great tool for spreading news and getting people excited about
> the project.
>
> --
> Felipe
>
> On Mon, Jan 29, 2024 at 4:07 PM Julian Hyde <jhyde.apa...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > The easiest thing is to share the Twitter credentials with any PMC member
> > who is interested in sending tweets (which is usually a very small number).
> >
> > To answer Antoine’s point. I have found Twitter an extremely effective way
> > for an open-source project to communicate with the “exo-community” — people
> > who are interested in the project but not so invested that they join the
> > email list. An open source project needs to perform pretty much all of the
> > functions of a for-profit company, and Twitter fulfills the marketing
> > function. Clearly Twitter is not what it used to be, but I don’t know what,
> > if anything, has replaced it.
> >
> > Julian
> >
> >
> > > On Jan 29, 2024, at 10:50 AM, Wes McKinney <wesmck...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > Is there a different tool other than TweetDeck available that can
> > > synchronize posts that go out on different social channels (LinkedIn,
> > > Twitter, Mastodon, etc.)? I've heard of things like Hootsuite but that's
> > > pretty expensive and definitely overkill for an open source project, but
> > > perhaps there is a more modest tool that would help with mirroring
> > content
> > > onto different platforms.
> > >
> > > On Sat, Jan 27, 2024 at 5:39 PM Antoine Pitrou <anto...@python.org>
> > wrote:
> > >
> > >>
> > >> My 2 cents : I don't understand what an open source project gains by
> > >> publishing on a microblogging platform.
> > >>
> > >> As for Twitter specifically, its recent governance changes would be good
> > >> reason for terminating the @ApacheArrow account, IMHO.
> > >>
> > >> Regards
> > >>
> > >> Antoine.
> > >>
> > >>
> > >> Le 27/01/2024 à 23:06, Bryce Mecum a écrit :
> > >>> I noticed that the @ApacheArrow Twitter account [1] hasn't posted
> > >>> since June 2023 which is around the time of the Arrow 12 release. When
> > >>> I asked on Zulip [2] about who runs or has access to post as that
> > >>> account, Kou indicated the account was managed using TweetDeck [3] and
> > >>> that this may no longer be an option due to subscription changes.
> > >>>
> > >>> I'm writing to get a sense of who currently has access and how the
> > >>> community would like to move forward with using the account. I'm also
> > >>> volunteering to help manage it.
> > >>>
> > >>> My questions are:
> > >>>
> > >>> - Who has access to @ApacheArrow [1]?
> > >>> - Is the community still interested in engaging on Twitter?
> > >>> - Is the community interested in other platforms, potentially just
> > >>> engaging with them through cross-posting?
> > >>>
> > >>> Thanks,
> > >>> Bryce
> > >>>
> > >>> [1] https://twitter.com/ApacheArrow
> > >>> [2]
> > >>
> > https://ursalabs.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/180245-dev/topic/ApacheArrow.20Twitter.20account/near/418346643
> > >>> [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tweetdeck
> > >>
> >
> >

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