T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4423.1 | I prefer to keep it technical.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Thu Feb 15 1996 10:04 | 13 |
| Tom Kopec
Principal Engineer
E&RT Assistive Technology
(and two-time DTJ author)
I would seriously argue against adding a marketing bent to DTJ. I view
it (and use it) as a *technical* journal, much as I use the similar
journals out of IBM, Philips, etc.. For marketing-type info, I do a lit
search on EETimes.
Just my $0.02 ..
...tom
|
4423.2 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Thu Feb 15 1996 10:08 | 6 |
|
All past issues of the DJT should be on the Digital Web page
someplace.
mike
|
4423.3 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Feb 15 1996 10:43 | 5 |
| Re: .2
They are - accessible through www.digital.com
Steve
|
4423.4 | Last time I looked | AD::MCGEE | At this point, we don't know. | Thu Feb 15 1996 14:19 | 6 |
| I feel a plain text file is not really accpetable for web presence.
I would like to see a better, more refined paper with the graphics
and other content preserved.
Bill.....
|
4423.5 | Technical marketing to the technical buyer | PERFOM::HENNING | | Thu Feb 15 1996 15:02 | 24 |
| re: DTJ as marketing or technical - this reminds me of one of Ken Olsen
stories (that I agree with): it seems that at the end of a customer
presentation, the cleaning staff came and threw away all the coffee
cups, scrap paper, etc. They ALSO threw away all the marketing
brochures. But they picked up and arranged neatly the "Processor
Handbooks".
From this vignette, KO derived the conclusion that the Handbooks were
the REAL marketing literature, because they had intrinsic value so
obvious that even a non-computer person could recognize it.
For the Science and Research Market, KO was right. And it's still true
today that the scientists and engineers tend to do their purchasing
based on more technical criteria than some other markets. I have
several times heard from customers how much they appreciate having the
DTJ on the web, and that it has positively influenced their buying
decisions.
So (with KO) I would urge you to keep your technical content, but don't
lose sight of the fact that the more technical you are, the more
valuable you are as marketing literature (for a certain class of
technical customer).
/a fan
|
4423.6 | It's good. Keep it that way. | BBPBV1::WALLACE | UNIX is digital. Use Digital UNIX. | Thu Feb 15 1996 15:02 | 10 |
| Hey, I already use it as a marketing tool - there is a certain class of
customer where the gory bits and bytes go down far better than the
industry-standard glossies offered elsewhere.
I like it the way it is. Thank you.
My role: Techy working in sales support looking after OEM customers.
regards
john
|
4423.7 | Have new customers! | NQOS01::nqsrv546.nqo.dec.com::Thompsonkr | Kris Thompson | Thu Feb 15 1996 15:13 | 6 |
| Catherine,
How can I review and update the customer subscription list I submitted
a few years ago?
Thanks, and keep up the good work!
|
4423.8 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Feb 15 1996 15:46 | 64 |
| I wrote this almost a year ago as part of the DTJ reader survey.
I'll include to help the discussion along.
Atlant
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Catherine:
"H/P Journal" is the principal journal to which I would compare
DTJ. For many reasons, some of which I can describe and some of
which I can't, I find H/P Journal an easier, more informative read.
I believe the principal difference is that H/P Journal is much
more human in many ways:
o The layout and design of H/P Journal is much more "human".
Whereas DTJ is a whole lot of dense text full of technical
detail and a few diagrams (line art), H/P Journal tends
to have a much more "open" typography and many more
photos. For a hardware article, the photos are often
of the entire unit being described as well as interesting
sub-assemblies within the unit or interesting assembly
processes. For software articles, the photos are often
relevent screen shots.
(Also, H/P Journal is stapled on limp paper, *NOT* perfect
bound on very stiff paper.)
o The text of H/P Journal tends to be much more "human", often
focusing on the anecdotal story, warts and all, of how the
product or family evolved. DTJ strikes me as being in a
much more "academic" (passive?) voice. And the writers seem
much less willing to admit to past mistakes in designs and
products, even when the experience of those past mistakes
plays a fundamental role in the new design.
o Because Hewlett-Packard does business in many more areas than
just computers, H/P Journal tends to cover many more areas
than DTJ. Yet every issue of H/P Journal shows off computers
at their best, whether free-standing or integrated into the
latest electrocardiograph, printer, or oscilloscope.
I realize there may not be much you can do about this problem
solely within Digital. But perhaps we should solicit more (some?
any?) user-written articles describing exciting applications
of our computers. For example, the Space Telescope Science
Institute (http://www.stsci.gov/, I think) does a wonderful
presentation at DECUS; I'm sure they could write a wonderful
article about sophisticated image processing using our
computers. (And it would have those dramatic pictures that
I really miss in DTJ!) Years ago, Disney's imagineers presented
at DECUS, describing how they used real-time computers in all
of their creations, whether animatronic or roller coaster.
Surely we could find these sorts of writers for DTJ.
I also read "IBM Journal of Research & Development", although not
as often as "H/P Journal", and have, in the past, read "TekScope"
(from Tektronix), "Bell Labs Record", and "Hitachi Review". Most
of the same comparisons that I made between DTJ and H/P Journal
are just as applicable to DTJ versus any of the others.
Atlant
|
4423.9 | tie in customer technologists | POWDML::LKENNEDY | time for cool change ... | Fri Feb 16 1996 07:41 | 22 |
|
Cathy,
I continue to respect the DTJ for its quality and also scan the
competitors' journals for hints at competitive direction. Though the
DTJ should not be used as a marketing vehicle it can play a key role in
building and preserving relationships and in reinforcing our own
technical strategy.
One way is to have technologists employed by our customers as guest
authors. DTJ has done this successfully, I think, with partners and
could include some leading technical users who write on related
technologies in which Digital no longer invests. This can provide our
engineering community with insights from the user view that are fresh
in the marketplace yet in a language that helps us design our own
products more appropriately.
Keep up the good work!
/Larry
|
4423.10 | Follow-up to 1st 9 replies | RDVAX::C_PHILLIPS | Cathy 226-2538 LJO2/D10 | Mon Feb 19 1996 13:43 | 20 |
| Let me clarify a couple of things...
1. Content
Content of the DTJ will NOT change. We're interested in
knowing if the DTJ is effective - in it's current form - in
building respect for Digital and for creating a preference
for Digital's products.
2. Internet
The DTJ is on the Internet at URL
http://www.digital.com/info/DTJ/home.html. As of Jan. 1, 1996,
the Web Service Group manages our web site and will supply HTML,
.PS, and .PDF file formats. You'll see the changes starting with
Volume 7, Number 4, Multimedia, due in late March. We're also
cleaning up the ftp archive.
Thank you.
Cathy Phillips
Circulation Manager, DTJ
|