Jupyter Media Strategy & Social Media Update

Project Jupyter
Jupyter Blog
Published in
3 min readJan 10, 2024

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Project Jupyter is on Hachyderm

Summary of announcement

We are excited to announce the formation of the Jupyter Media Strategy working group (JMS)!

The growth of the Jupyter community has led to an increase in the number of people who want to engage with our brand and an increase in the number of official Jupyter media channels. As the use of our public channels has grown, it is clear we need to have a better structure for managing not only access to the various accounts but also a more cohesive strategy for the messaging presented on those channels.

The JMS will ensure communications in Jupyter official channels are strategic and benefit Project Jupyter. Jupyter publications, social media posts, promotions and other media activity are meant to be community driven, as supported by distributed responsibilities in the Jupyter governance model. The JMS will enable access for the community to speak publicly through the official Jupyter communication channels. The JMS will also help to improve Jupyter media activity by creating strategy and guidelines, serving as editors for existing public media channels, and overseeing creation/delegation of new media channels.

Do you have a message to share with the Jupyter Community?

If you have a Jupyter or Open Source related message or story that you would like to share within the Jupyter official channels, here is a checklist to guide you.

  • Please plan ahead. We are primarily a group of volunteers and we will review requests on a weekly basis.
  • Submit your post to Jupyter publication. Follow submission guidelines and processes outlined here.

The JMS will respond to your request. Possible outcomes include:

  • Approval: the JMS will publish your blog post taking into account other pending posts in the editorial lineup as need be.
  • Request for revision of content: guidance for improvements.
  • Rejection of topic: we’ll share reasons why we’re unable to publish your topic.

Jupyter Official Channels

Mastodon is currently Project Jupyter’s preferred social media channel. Other social media channels may be used to amplify posts from the Project Jupyter blog.

Meet the JMS

Ana Ruvalcaba (top left), is a Director at California Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo. She serves on the Jupyter Executive Council and various community groups at Jupyter including DEI and Community Building.

Andrii Ieroshenko (top right) is a Software Development Engineer at AWS. Andrii is a Project Jupyter contributor and community member. He serves on the JupyterLab and Jupyter Notebook councils.

Steven Silvester (bottom left), is an Engineering Lead at MongoDB. He serves on the Jupyter Executive Council and a member of several software steering councils.

Jake Diamond-Reivich (bottom right), is a Founder at Mito. He serves on Jupyter Media Strategy Working Group. Jake is excited to help Jupyter flourish by optimizing community communications and making it easier for people to engage with the community.

Send us your feedback

If you have general questions or ideas related to Jupyter Media Strategy we welcome feedback. Contact the JMS at jupyter-media-strategy@googlegroups.com.

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Project Jupyter exists to develop open-source software, open standards, and services for interactive and reproducible computing.