Damien,
> The issue #00 of PostgreSQL Magazine was a demo and it proved that
> there's a public for a regular magazine dedicated to PostgreSQL. The
> stats from the pgmag.org website show that the PDF version is the most
> popular : we got approx. 4000 readers for the demo issue. Meanwhile the
> paper version was warmly welcomed at pgcon and others conferences....
And I'm still planning to distribute it at pgOpen.
> Although I did a lot of work by myself for the issue #00, i want to be
> clear that PostgreSQL Magazine is intended to be a community driven
> project. So if you are interested by this projetct, come on board !
Well, in the course of the US Letter stuff, I had to figure out Scribus,
so I'm now able to help with layout. One request though: can we use
standard TrueType fonts, and not Ubuntu-specific fonts?
> We need Editors, Graphic designers, Reviewers, Translators and of course
> writers. Even if you don't a previous experience in the media, you can
> help the project in many ways !
If we have a budget, I have a good graphic designer who is inexpensive
but not free.
> I've open a dedicated mailing list for the project so that we don't
> flood the psql-advocacy list ;-)
If you want. This list is nonbusy enough that it could host magazine
discussion until people complain.
> According to me, here's a basic idea of what the pgmag #01 would look
> like : The obvious theme for the issue will be PostgreSQL 9.1 ! This
> time i'd like to have 48 pages, with richer content and graphics.
I think it would be better to have less pages of higher quality. It'll
be hard enough to produce another high-quality 24-page magazine. Heck,
I think you should consider 16 if you're planning to publish twice a year.
> * Business model (advertisement ? sponsors ? let readers pay ?)
I think we should have sponsored advertisements.
> * Even the name of magazine may change if someone comes with something
> better ;-)
Gods, please no naming arguments! ;-b
--
Josh Berkus
PostgreSQL Experts Inc.
http://pgexperts.com