-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 65
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
New Jupyter.org Website Design #49
base: master
Are you sure you want to change the base?
Conversation
Create jupyter-website.md
added images
Added photos.
Thanks @tgeorgeux, what kind of feedback are you looking for ? Is that a mockup that need to be coded, or is that screenshot of an existing prototype ? Thanks ! |
Misc comments, Personal thoughts not requests for changes (sorry I just saw that the diff have a text file in int) :
|
That's a mockup that needs to be coded. Some of the website has been prototyped here: https://guarded-sands-77993.herokuapp.com/ . That prototype isn't generated through any static generator, but it's a great proof of concept. I want to push for development on this, I think it would be best if we could approve the design, and then moving forward the discussions would be around how to implement it most efficiently. I think there may be institutional partners interested in helping out with this effort, but I think approaching them with a community and steering council approved design makes the proposal more interesting. |
Just a quick thought from me: I think in the spirit of JEPs, the vote here is not on the small details of the implementation (and as @Carreau notes, this is just a mock-up, not an implementation). The vote is on the initiative and the broad contours of the idea, and anyway the design team did a nice job of soliciting feedback already. (@tgeorgeux let me know if you disagree with that and I am happy to rescind the point). I don't have a vote but I would +1 the JEP if I did. That said, I think that there are at least 5 things involved in the website refactor
Many of these points can be accomplished now, and with the current skillsets that we have available. Many of these points in-fact have different groups of people best-suited to tackle them. The design team did a great job knocking out some prototypes for 4, and I think that many of 1-3 could be done fairly quickly on the infra that we already have. Number 5 will be the most complex (if the decision is to switch to a new SSG) but then again much progress can be made before we get to it. So, my suggestion is that we try to:
|
Maybe 'Apps' (or 'Products') instead of 'Technologies'?
Is there an SVG explaining the relation between the projects?
BinderHub = JupyterHub + repo2docker
JupyterHub =
Resources for: (IDK) Data Analysts, Educators, Developers, System
Administrators
…On Fri, May 15, 2020, 6:44 PM T. George ***@***.***> wrote:
I don't think the screenshots are rendering in the Diff, so here's the
screenshots mentioned.
[image: Home]
<https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101975-e18a9900-96c2-11ea-8de5-61ef879b6577.png>
[image: Documentation]
<https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101980-e3ecf300-96c2-11ea-9fb7-bb651fca80a6.png>
[image: Technologies]
<https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101988-e7807a00-96c2-11ea-9dad-81d4038f3d78.png>
[image: JupyterHub]
<https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101994-e94a3d80-96c2-11ea-857b-2fbc866b7ce7.png>
—
You are receiving this because you are subscribed to this thread.
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
<#49 (comment)>,
or unsubscribe
<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AAAMNS5V4Z4PF4ELJFSIRPLRRXAUPANCNFSM4NCT4DGQ>
.
|
Is there an audience profile for this design project?
- Coders / Developers looking for the full URLs to the docs and sources
- (IDK)
- Data Analysts
- Educators
- https://github.com/quobit/awesome-python-in-education/#jupyter
- System Administrators
+ Decision makers
+ Contributors
... Linking to the awesome lists might be good:
- https://github.com/markusschanta/awesome-jupyter
- https://github.com/mauhai/awesome-jupyterlab
- https://github.com/Yogayu/awesome-jupyterlab-extension
…On Fri, May 15, 2020, 9:32 PM Wes Turner ***@***.***> wrote:
Maybe 'Apps' (or 'Products') instead of 'Technologies'?
Is there an SVG explaining the relation between the projects?
BinderHub = JupyterHub + repo2docker
JupyterHub =
Resources for: (IDK) Data Analysts, Educators, Developers, System
Administrators
On Fri, May 15, 2020, 6:44 PM T. George ***@***.***> wrote:
> I don't think the screenshots are rendering in the Diff, so here's the
> screenshots mentioned.
> [image: Home]
> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101975-e18a9900-96c2-11ea-8de5-61ef879b6577.png>
> [image: Documentation]
> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101980-e3ecf300-96c2-11ea-9fb7-bb651fca80a6.png>
> [image: Technologies]
> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101988-e7807a00-96c2-11ea-9dad-81d4038f3d78.png>
> [image: JupyterHub]
> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101994-e94a3d80-96c2-11ea-857b-2fbc866b7ce7.png>
>
> —
> You are receiving this because you are subscribed to this thread.
> Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
> <#49 (comment)>,
> or unsubscribe
> <https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AAAMNS5V4Z4PF4ELJFSIRPLRRXAUPANCNFSM4NCT4DGQ>
> .
>
|
There were Twitter discussions about a hashtag and a verb form for
#REES-compatible #BinderReady / #Repo2dockerReady repos:
https://twitter.com/westurner/status/1253915184877441028
That hashtag and verb form could be prominent?
Maybe also links to trending Jupyter notebooks on GH?
https://github.com/trending/jupyter-notebook?since=daily
There are now a number of projects that work with
jupyter-repo2docker/#REES-compatible repos; so maybe #BinderReady is not
the most encompassing hashtag for the category?
...
This was succinct:
#BinderHub builds containers with #repo2docker; which builds from any of
the config files that #REES (Reproducible Execution Environment
Specification) supports: environment.yml, requirements.txt, postBuild, …
https://t.co/L0VjA0WeJO
Configuration Files:
https://t.co/44pwC1Gmgh
Why are those on separate pages though?
We can scroll through one long page on our mobile devices (which we're
accessing jupyter.org from instead of gh or docs) most easily.
https://repo2docker.readthedocs.io/en/latest/specification.html
https://repo2docker.readthedocs.io/en/latest/config_files.html (this list
could be prominent in the BinderHub section of the page(s))
…On Fri, May 15, 2020, 9:41 PM Wes Turner ***@***.***> wrote:
Is there an audience profile for this design project?
- Coders / Developers looking for the full URLs to the docs and sources
- (IDK)
- Data Analysts
- Educators
- https://github.com/quobit/awesome-python-in-education/#jupyter
- System Administrators
+ Decision makers
+ Contributors
... Linking to the awesome lists might be good:
- https://github.com/markusschanta/awesome-jupyter
- https://github.com/mauhai/awesome-jupyterlab
- https://github.com/Yogayu/awesome-jupyterlab-extension
On Fri, May 15, 2020, 9:32 PM Wes Turner ***@***.***> wrote:
> Maybe 'Apps' (or 'Products') instead of 'Technologies'?
>
> Is there an SVG explaining the relation between the projects?
>
> BinderHub = JupyterHub + repo2docker
> JupyterHub =
>
> Resources for: (IDK) Data Analysts, Educators, Developers, System
> Administrators
>
> On Fri, May 15, 2020, 6:44 PM T. George ***@***.***> wrote:
>
>> I don't think the screenshots are rendering in the Diff, so here's the
>> screenshots mentioned.
>> [image: Home]
>> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101975-e18a9900-96c2-11ea-8de5-61ef879b6577.png>
>> [image: Documentation]
>> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101980-e3ecf300-96c2-11ea-9fb7-bb651fca80a6.png>
>> [image: Technologies]
>> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101988-e7807a00-96c2-11ea-9dad-81d4038f3d78.png>
>> [image: JupyterHub]
>> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101994-e94a3d80-96c2-11ea-857b-2fbc866b7ce7.png>
>>
>> —
>> You are receiving this because you are subscribed to this thread.
>> Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
>> <#49 (comment)>,
>> or unsubscribe
>> <https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AAAMNS5V4Z4PF4ELJFSIRPLRRXAUPANCNFSM4NCT4DGQ>
>> .
>>
>
|
(FWIW, as a dev, my preference is for line-height:1.2 and the links to the
sources, docs, and blog/socialmedia above the fold)
Cool SVGs tho :)
…On Fri, May 15, 2020, 9:58 PM Wes Turner ***@***.***> wrote:
There were Twitter discussions about a hashtag and a verb form for
#REES-compatible #BinderReady / #Repo2dockerReady repos:
https://twitter.com/westurner/status/1253915184877441028
That hashtag and verb form could be prominent?
Maybe also links to trending Jupyter notebooks on GH?
https://github.com/trending/jupyter-notebook?since=daily
There are now a number of projects that work with
jupyter-repo2docker/#REES-compatible repos; so maybe #BinderReady is not
the most encompassing hashtag for the category?
...
This was succinct:
> #BinderHub builds containers with #repo2docker; which builds from any
of the config files that #REES (Reproducible Execution Environment
Specification) supports: environment.yml, requirements.txt, postBuild, …
https://t.co/L0VjA0WeJO
Configuration Files:
https://t.co/44pwC1Gmgh
Why are those on separate pages though?
We can scroll through one long page on our mobile devices (which we're
accessing jupyter.org from instead of gh or docs) most easily.
https://repo2docker.readthedocs.io/en/latest/specification.html
https://repo2docker.readthedocs.io/en/latest/config_files.html (this list
could be prominent in the BinderHub section of the page(s))
On Fri, May 15, 2020, 9:41 PM Wes Turner ***@***.***> wrote:
> Is there an audience profile for this design project?
>
> - Coders / Developers looking for the full URLs to the docs and sources
> - (IDK)
> - Data Analysts
> - Educators
> - https://github.com/quobit/awesome-python-in-education/#jupyter
> - System Administrators
> + Decision makers
> + Contributors
>
> ... Linking to the awesome lists might be good:
> - https://github.com/markusschanta/awesome-jupyter
> - https://github.com/mauhai/awesome-jupyterlab
> - https://github.com/Yogayu/awesome-jupyterlab-extension
>
>
>
> On Fri, May 15, 2020, 9:32 PM Wes Turner ***@***.***> wrote:
>
>> Maybe 'Apps' (or 'Products') instead of 'Technologies'?
>>
>> Is there an SVG explaining the relation between the projects?
>>
>> BinderHub = JupyterHub + repo2docker
>> JupyterHub =
>>
>> Resources for: (IDK) Data Analysts, Educators, Developers, System
>> Administrators
>>
>> On Fri, May 15, 2020, 6:44 PM T. George ***@***.***>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I don't think the screenshots are rendering in the Diff, so here's the
>>> screenshots mentioned.
>>> [image: Home]
>>> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101975-e18a9900-96c2-11ea-8de5-61ef879b6577.png>
>>> [image: Documentation]
>>> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101980-e3ecf300-96c2-11ea-9fb7-bb651fca80a6.png>
>>> [image: Technologies]
>>> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101988-e7807a00-96c2-11ea-9dad-81d4038f3d78.png>
>>> [image: JupyterHub]
>>> <https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/22109376/82101994-e94a3d80-96c2-11ea-857b-2fbc866b7ce7.png>
>>>
>>> —
>>> You are receiving this because you are subscribed to this thread.
>>> Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
>>> <#49 (comment)>,
>>> or unsubscribe
>>> <https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AAAMNS5V4Z4PF4ELJFSIRPLRRXAUPANCNFSM4NCT4DGQ>
>>> .
>>>
>>
|
I'm a bit confused if we are approving the design as rendered (which is nice and clean) or the concept that we should refactor the website or something else entirely. If this is a JEP, shouldn't it have some prose to say "hey we want to do a website refactor" and what it will include (@choldgraf has mentioned). I fully support the website refactor as a +1 as a JEP this would receive a -1 from me since it is missing clarity on what we are being asked to vote on. PS Thanks for the work on this @tgeorgeux - nice design and @choldgraf on providing some helpful context. |
I think the problem is the following: This pull request have a text file with is hard to spot with all the images. I'll update Tim's messgae at the beginning with the content of this text. |
Thanks Chris and Carol for your comments. I definitely agree that for me it's a +1 on having a general refactor and update of the website, though I want to understand what we are buying into. I'm also worried if what you propose requires a JEP. And generally I would prefer to have a plan on how to progressively get from where we are now to where we want to be. I don't want to have this be a second version of getting JupyterLab 1.0 through the door with a big swap at the end. I'm pretty sure we can avoid this "large upfront commitment" with a more progressive changes ALmost quasi static. Typically I would love a plan where each step is minimal and self contained where each step can be finished and deployed, for example:
It will also make it much easier to digest. One thing which has also not been mentioned is compatibility with previous website. There are potentially a large number of link to current jupyter.org. Will the URLs change ? Will some information already present be removed ? If so how will that be handled ? If the project is "create the new website and on Jan 1st 2021 switch to the new design", then i'll 1) not trust you that this will happen 2) likely to be against it. I'm happy to help with technical guidance and make sure we keep the complexity down. I'm not good at deciding whether the design or content is acceptable though. THanks for working on this ! |
--
EDIT From Matthias, The diff has a text file, here is the content:
Jupyter Website Re-Design Implementation Process.
Problem
Technical: The existing Jupyter Website is a mix of Jekyll templates and bespoke hand-crafted Javascript. Over time the templates have experienced bit-rot and the website is difficult to update significantly without breaking it.
Design: The design of the existing Jupyter Website is dated, and doesn't reflect the complexity of the existing organization, nor does it help outsiders onboard to Jupyter's software or community sufficiently.
Proposed Enhancement
Over the summer of 2019 a team from UCI performed research then designed a new website including an MVP set of pages, templates for future pages, and a style guide for components.
I propose we use this design work as a template for a new Jupyter.org website using a stable static website generator, with a few hard-hitting interactive elements to help users discover Jupyter Projects that would be useful to them. I propose we use Gatsby.js to generate pages via a markdown converter, this will allow us to seemlessly integrate with the moreinteractive elements.
Detailed Explanation
Design details
The design of this new website is finished and be viewed here.
Here's some screenshots of the design:
Development details
Development is the next step. We need a static site generator. (@marwahaha made an initial prototype) There is (at least) one custom component in the current design that requires some custom Javascript. Preferably, we could write such components using a well-known framework like ReactJS.
I propose we use GatsbyJS to achieve this.
gatsby-transformer-remark
native plugin.Implementation
There is decent amount of developer time needed up front. This will pay-off in the long run as the maintenance cost is low after initial development.
Approach to rallying developer time+efforts:
Pros
Cons