March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to pragma | pragma wrote:
> In article <dvs2bl$18bo$1@digitaldaemon.com>, Walter Bright says...
>
>>
>>"kris" <foo@bar.com> wrote in message news:dvra93$cdi$1@digitaldaemon.com...
>>
>>>Not to be a party-pooper, but I got the impression that catchphrases are a bit 80's? Does anyone buy into that type of pitch anymore?
>>>I mean, when was the last time you swallowed a line like "Power, Performance, Productivity" from an eager and straight-faced salesperson?
>>
>>That's not a good catchphrase. But when you've got a few seconds to make a first impression before they turn the page, a good one helps.
>>
>
>
> How about: D - Work smarter, not harder.
Or "Dude! Work smarter, not harder" :)
Jesting aside; wouldn't it be a good idea to identify the target audience for this kind of message? Is it this group? Perhaps the Hackers noted by Paul Graham? Or management? Java programmers? C# developers? Who?
One of the fundamental rules of marketing is to identify (and know) your market. It's also rumoured that engineers make piss-poor marketers ~ too honest and/or pragmatic.
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March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Walter Bright | Walter Bright wrote:
> If you could sum up the essence of D in a "high concept", what would it be?
>
> http://www.themegahitmovies.com/highconcept.htm
>
> Some particularly bad ones:
>
> 1) Write once, debug everywhere
> 2) Tastes great, less filling.
> 3) Choosy programmers choose D.
> 4) C's dead, Jim.
> 5) So sophisticated, even we don't understand it.
> 6) Resistance is useless.
>
> Some marginally better ones:
>
> 1) Power, Performance, Productivity
>
>
* Draconian C++ to Calisthenic D.
Or is that too confrontational? :)
-JJR
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March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Walter Bright | In article <dvs2bl$18bo$1@digitaldaemon.com>, Walter Bright says... > > >"kris" <foo@bar.com> wrote in message news:dvra93$cdi$1@digitaldaemon.com... >> Not to be a party-pooper, but I got the impression that catchphrases are a >> bit 80's? Does anyone buy into that type of pitch anymore? >> I mean, when was the last time you swallowed a line like "Power, >> Performance, Productivity" from an eager and straight-faced salesperson? > >That's not a good catchphrase. But when you've got a few seconds to make a first impression before they turn the page, a good one helps. 'Speed, power, and all the features of C++, Java, and C#, with a lot less code.' Kevin |
March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Walter Bright | Walter Bright wrote:
> "kris" <foo@bar.com> wrote in message news:dvra93$cdi$1@digitaldaemon.com...
>
>>Not to be a party-pooper, but I got the impression that catchphrases are a bit 80's? Does anyone buy into that type of pitch anymore?
>>I mean, when was the last time you swallowed a line like "Power, Performance, Productivity" from an eager and straight-faced salesperson?
>
>
> That's not a good catchphrase. But when you've got a few seconds to make a first impression before they turn the page, a good one helps.
In terms of print, there's a number of ways to do that. A catch-phrase is one, but requires parsing and semantic analysis (brain time). Catchy names are apparently processed in a related but much less immediately taxing fashion; akin to facial recognition? Even if we don't "get it", there's often enough interest to turn the page back over ~ just like when you see a face you almost recognise, and a whole lot of dedicated effort goes into resolving that ~ sometimes for days <g>
An interesting logo, or anything pictorial that stands out from the background (such as a comic strip) are apparently much more noticable than catch-phrases. That's hardly surprising given that our predator eyes excel at isolating 'interest' from vast quantities of background noise.
2 cents
p.s. I guess you didn't care much for "Get it on!" and "Amber" then? :)
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March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to kris | kris wrote:
> pragma wrote:
>> In article <dvs2bl$18bo$1@digitaldaemon.com>, Walter Bright says...
>>
>>>
>>> "kris" <foo@bar.com> wrote in message news:dvra93$cdi$1@digitaldaemon.com...
>>>
>>>> Not to be a party-pooper, but I got the impression that catchphrases are a bit 80's? Does anyone buy into that type of pitch anymore?
>>>> I mean, when was the last time you swallowed a line like "Power, Performance, Productivity" from an eager and straight-faced salesperson?
>>>
>>> That's not a good catchphrase. But when you've got a few seconds to make a first impression before they turn the page, a good one helps.
>>
>>
>> How about: D - Work smarter, not harder.
>
>
> Or "Dude! Work smarter, not harder" :)
>
> Jesting aside; wouldn't it be a good idea to identify the target audience for this kind of message? Is it this group? Perhaps the Hackers noted by Paul Graham? Or management? Java programmers? C# developers? Who?
>
> One of the fundamental rules of marketing is to identify (and know) your market. It's also rumoured that engineers make piss-poor marketers ~ too honest and/or pragmatic.
If we throw enough catch phrases out... maybe we'll capture all markets! < big toothy grin >.
Although, I'm curious to know what kind of market "Dude" will attract. What happens when you cross a nerd with a hipster: do you get a game developer? :)
I once came across a comic that showed two kids discussing a topic in great earnest, skateboards in hand. It went something like this:
kid #1: Dude...
kid #2: Dude!
kid #1: Dude?
kid #2: Duuuuude...
kid #1: Duh uuude
kid #2: Duu -ude
kid #1: dude.
kid #2: dude.
Translation (can't remember the original so I've taken some license here):
kid #1: Greetings, my dear friend...
kid #2: Salutations to you, sir!
kid #1: Have you made any progress with our prior expatiation of the metaphysical implications of moral order?
kid #2: Affirmative, I have deduced that rather than remonstrating a salient conclusion, we have but managed to coalesce a protuberancy of words and meaning: in short, it was a complete tautology.
kid #1: I utterly and completely agree -- your perspicuousness in the matter, at least, is indisputable.
kid #2: You are most kind; yet my sagacity is but a reflection of your own circumspection.
kid #1: I must go now; we shall meet again.
kid #2: Most indubitably; adieu to you, sir.
:)
-JJR
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March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to John Reimer | > * Draconian C++ to Calisthenic D.
Hehe I like it, maybe even more confrontational like
D , what C++ should have been .
D , because C++ sucks.
D , its not your fathers programming language.
D , kicking your ass all over this mo fo!
John Reimer wrote:
> Walter Bright wrote:
>
>> If you could sum up the essence of D in a "high concept", what would it be?
>>
>> http://www.themegahitmovies.com/highconcept.htm
>>
>> Some particularly bad ones:
>>
>> 1) Write once, debug everywhere
>> 2) Tastes great, less filling.
>> 3) Choosy programmers choose D.
>> 4) C's dead, Jim.
>> 5) So sophisticated, even we don't understand it.
>> 6) Resistance is useless.
>>
>> Some marginally better ones:
>>
>> 1) Power, Performance, Productivity
>>
>>
>
>
> * Draconian C++ to Calisthenic D.
>
> Or is that too confrontational? :)
>
> -JJR
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March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Walter Bright | Walter Bright wrote:
> "kris" <foo@bar.com> wrote in message news:dvra93$cdi$1@digitaldaemon.com...
>> Not to be a party-pooper, but I got the impression that catchphrases are a bit 80's? Does anyone buy into that type of pitch anymore?
>> I mean, when was the last time you swallowed a line like "Power, Performance, Productivity" from an eager and straight-faced salesperson?
>
> That's not a good catchphrase. But when you've got a few seconds to make a first impression before they turn the page, a good one helps.
Do we really care about the type of person that will make a decision about a language in the first 5 seconds they hear of it? Even an executive summary would include more than just a catchprase.
Sean
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March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to pragma | "pragma" <pragma_member@pathlink.com> wrote in message news:dvs65b$1dee$1@digitaldaemon.com... > How about: D - Work smarter, not harder. > ? It's too vague. Remember the Java one - "write once, run everywhere"? That was very effective. Need something like that for D. C++'s catchphrase was originally "C with Classes", and later "A better C." Andrei sent me a list of what pops in his head when he thinks about a language: -------------------- 1. FORTRAN. "First high-level language for scientific computing" 2. LISP. "Lambda. Garbage collection. S-expressions." 3. C. "Portable, efficient assembler. Systems programming" 4. C++. "Multiparadigm" 5. Perl. "Regular expressions. String manipulation." 6. Java. "Virtual Machine (= Write Once, ...). Safety." 7. Smalltalk. "Pure object-oriented." 8. Haskell. "Functional. Type inference." 9. Eiffel. "Contracts." ------------------------- "A better C++" - don't want to copy Bjarne "C++ reloaded" - too hollywood "C++ version 2" - <g> "C++ - we can rebuilt it, we have the technology" - 6 million dollar mannish "C++ streamlined" - ? |
March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Walter Bright | Walter Bright wrote:
> "kris" <foo@bar.com> wrote in message news:dvra93$cdi$1@digitaldaemon.com...
>> Not to be a party-pooper, but I got the impression that catchphrases are a bit 80's? Does anyone buy into that type of pitch anymore?
>> I mean, when was the last time you swallowed a line like "Power, Performance, Productivity" from an eager and straight-faced salesperson?
>
> That's not a good catchphrase. But when you've got a few seconds to make a first impression before they turn the page, a good one helps.
>
I like "D Code", as it has sort of a double meaning.
D Code - code in the d programming language
D Code - as in decode... "making code as easy as text" or "code in an ordinary language"
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March 22, 2006 Re: Slogan/catchphrase for D? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Charles | On Wed, 22 Mar 2006 15:22:16 -0500, Charles <noone@nowhere.com> wrote:
> > * Draconian C++ to Calisthenic D.
>
> Hehe I like it, maybe even more confrontational like
>
> D , what C++ should have been .
> D , because C++ sucks.
> D , its not your fathers programming language.
> D , kicking your ass all over this mo fo!
>
Yes, I like "D, what C++ should have been.". If the slogan includes "C++" at all, I don't want it suggesting C++ is any good.
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