You make excellent points. I agree with all of them.

On May 10, 1:54 pm, Anthony <[email protected]> wrote:
> All, thanks so much for your thoughtful responses -- very helpful and
> encouraging. I can see this is a very active, open, and supportive
> community, and I believe I will give web2py a try. (I followed
> Massimo's advice and posted a similar question on the ROR list, and
> Massimo even popped up over there to add to the discussion -- nice
> work.)
>
> I appreciate the points made regarding why I'm not finding a lot of
> impressive looking examples of web2py-powered sites (i.e., focus on
> intranet development; lack of design-oriented web2py developers).
> Digging into the list a bit, it appears this issue has come up before:
>
> http://groups.google.com/group/web2py/browse_frm/thread/22d37d27b6fc969fhttp://groups.google.com/group/web2py/browse_frm/thread/e70143ebf8be476c
>
> I know I'm new here, and I don't want to be presumptuous, but perhaps
> it would be useful to hear the perspective of someone who has recently
> been "shopping" for a web framework and comparing the different
> alternatives. For me at least (and I suspect I'm not alone), it's very
> helpful to be able to identify some high quality examples and/or some
> high profile organizations using the framework. These "used by"
> examples (a) tell me that other successful organizations have found
> value in the framework, (b) demonstrate real-world capabilities and
> use cases, and (c) boost confidence in the long-term viability of the
> framework (i.e., it's more likely to continue being developed/
> supported if it's got lots of users and/or at least a few high profile
> users).
>
> Given web2py's unique situation, you might consider some of the
> following:
>
> * Identify a handful of your best public examples and highlight just
> those. Among the existing crop, a few that stood out to me were
> several of Julio Flores' sites (i.e., pyforum.org, techfuel.net, and
> the screenshots of pyshowcase.org and pystack.com posted on
> techfuel.net), web2pyslices.com (though the design could use a little
> polishing), and qualitysystems.com.
>
> * Just as important as what you include is what you don't. Don't list
> 50 sites just because they all happen to use web2py. The unimpressive
> ones may actually detract from interest in web2py, and they make it a
> lot harder to find the few good ones (not to mention that some of the
> sites listed don't even exist anymore). If there are a few sites that
> have some impressive capabilities under the hood but just happen not
> to look so pretty, maybe call those out separately, but provide some
> explanation (e.g., "Doesn't look pretty because not intended for wide
> public consumption, but it does XYZ in only 100 lines of code...").
>
> * For internal/intranet projects with notable companies, try to get
> permission to mention the company name (possibly with logo) on the
> web2py site.
>
> * If you can't get permission to mention the company name, provide a
> general description of the type of company and nature of the project
> (e.g., "A Fortune 500 financial services organization uses web2py to
> power its mission critical XYZ system...").
>
> * In some cases, you might also be able to show redacted screenshots
> (i.e., blur out confidential/proprietary details or replace with
> generic data).
>
> More generally, compared with some of the other frameworks (even
> Pylons and TurboGears), I think the web2py site itself could use a
> little more polish and organization. There appear to be a lot of great
> resources, but they seem a bit scattered. For example, there's the
> book, which includes its own wiki pages, plus a separate wiki style
> FAQ (which is just a very long unorganized list), plus an entirely
> separate wiki site, all with different UI's. In addition, there are
> examples and applications on the main site (not particularly well
> organized), a separate plugins site, and additional apps, plugins,
> examples, and snippets on web2pyslices.com, again all with different
> UI's. That's a lot of seemingly related documentation and resources
> scattered across a lot of different places (that are not well
> integrated or universally searchable). Also, I can't find a way to
> navigate to the "Powered By" list without already knowing the URL
> (actually, that's probably a good thing for the time being), and at
> least two of the affiliated companies listed don't appear to exist
> anymore. I could go on, but you get the idea.
>
> Honestly, coming from the sites of some of the other frameworks,
> web2py suffers a bit by comparison (I think unnecessarily so). You
> seem to have all the ingredients -- they just need to be organized and
> presented a bit more effectively (and attractively). Fair or not,
> prospective users will make inferences about the substance and quality
> of the framework based on the presentation (not to mention the fact
> that the organization/presentation of the resources directly impacts
> the ease with which prospective users can learn about web2py and new
> users can become proficient with it).
>
> Anyway, I'm sure you've thought about and discussed some of these
> issues before. I just thought it might be helpful to hear from someone
> looking at it with fresh eyes.
>
> Again, thanks everyone.
>
> On May 10, 12:00 pm, mdmcginn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > But, as has been pointed out, people might be confused or discouraged
> > by the look and feel of web2py.com, if all they want is easy, good-
> > looking websites/webapps. It's great that Massimo is making Drupal and
> > Wordpress templates to work with web2py. But we should strive to make
> > web2py.com, web2pyslices, etc. look beautiful, so we don't give the
> > impression that great design is incompatible with web2py.
>
> > On May 8, 11:30 am, Thadeus Burgess <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > One thing I have noticed is django and RoR is for the most part, a
> > > designer oriented community. IE: Lots of designers, few real
> > > programmers/engineers, this is why you see design-oriented keywords
> > > floating around in those frameworks. Most of us here in the web2py
> > > community are programmers/engineers/physicists, etc... we don't have
> > > the best design skills, even if we are brilliant =)
>
> > > --
> > > Thadeus
>
> > > On Sat, May 8, 2010 at 9:07 AM, Alexei Vinidiktov
>
> > > > On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 12:37 PM, Anthony <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > >> From what I've read, web2py sounds like a great framework --
> > > >> comprehensive, well-integrated, easy to set up, learn, and deploy,
> > > >> etc. However, although it sounds good on paper, I haven't yet found a
> > > >> single site built with web2py that looks all that impressive (at least
> > > >> superficially). It's easy to find quite a number of sophisticated and
> > > >> impressive looking sites/apps built with Ruby on Rails and Django, but
> > > >> I haven't seen anything remotely comparable based on web2py. I'm
> > > >> wondering why the disparity.
>
> > > > What you've seen on those sites is the façade. It's the work of
> > > > graphic designers and not a merit of the underlying frameworks. That's
> > > > what you see.
>
> > > > I'm sure the same effect can be achieved with any web2py based
> > > > website. You just need to hire a great graphic designer and usability
> > > > expert.

Reply via email to