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Preparing for the CEF meeting with other open source developers made me realize that there are a lot of ways that the people I'm interacting there are a community that could benefit enormously from a community manager. I can think of several specific tasks:
Constructing mechanisms for developers to keep tabs on what others are doing (and have done)
Collaborating on technologies (like open standards) that allow exchange of work and results,
Organizing get-togethers at events like the CEF and SciPy conferences
Exchanging information about how to find or hire talented people to contribute
Just to tack on: NumFOCUS can manage the logistics for a dedicated conference if it's held in conjunction with PyData NYC 2020 (probably November). If that is of interest, you could include our event management service fee in the Sloan grant.
A community manager would be useful to work on community management and getting folks to attend the conference (i.e. marketing the event).
Here are some things that a community manager might do:
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