Re: On breaking the woohoo barrier...thoughts on how GNOME can get great
- From: Havoc Pennington <hp redhat com>
- To: Sankarshan Mukhopadhyay <sankarshan mukhopadhyay gmail com>
- Cc: marketing list <marketing-list gnome org>, desktop-devel-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: On breaking the woohoo barrier...thoughts on how GNOME can get great
- Date: Mon, 17 Jul 2006 14:05:38 -0400
Sankarshan Mukhopadhyay wrote:
On 7/14/06, *Jeff Waugh* <jdub perkypants org
<mailto:jdub perkypants org>> wrote:
I have been banging on this drum in the Ubuntu community for a
while, but I
guess I haven't been banging it sufficiently loud in GNOME: Whenever
we talk
about GNOME, we *must* talk first and foremost about benefits, and
then back
it up with the features.
Amen. :)
One of the things that seems to be drifting with GNOME both in its
current form and in the upcoming (and proposed Topaz) is that a whole
bunch of features are getting tossed at the end user without actively
bundling them together in a coherent whole of benefits accrued.
Why would end users use GNOME and thus Linux unless they are sold on the
benefits of using them ? The bells and whistles would come later and
would come in a logical followup.
wrt marketing, Seth Godin ("Purple Cow") does a good job arguing for
making something that stands out, vs. figuring out how to get whatever
you made to stand out (after you're done making it).
thought about from a design rather than marketing angle; why would end
users use GNOME and Linux if those things were not designed/invented to
benefit them?
The goal should not be "get people to use Linux" but to provide benefits
to people. Linux or GNOME or Java or Mono or a web site or a hardware
device or whatever it is should be implementation, not goal.
Havoc
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