Credits The Zope software receives contributions from far and wide. Here's the Zope Hall of Fame: o Stephen Purcell allows us to distribute his PyUnit unit testing framework with Zope. o Jeff Bauer is Zope Dude Number One. Jeff took over PCGI and kept pushing it forward through the years. o Sam Rushing worked with us at Digital Creations to make Medusa the publishing platform for ZServer and the concurrency of Zope2. o A subset of windows guru Mark Hammond's win32 extensions are bundled with win32 binary distributions of Zope. o Martijn Pieters and Brian Hooper contributed the #in reverse attribute. o Phillip Eby contributed the DTML 'let' tag and many other useful ideas, including the inspiration for the DTML 'call', 'with' and 'return' tags. o The DateTime module was based on work from Ted Horst. o Jordan Baker contributed the 'try' tag, something we've wanted for a long, long time. o Martijn Pieters chipped in with a safe range function. o Michael Hauser came up with the name "Zope". o Eric Kidd from Userland contributed to ZPublisher's support for XML-RPC. o Andrew M. Kuchling wrote the initial version of mod_pcgi, making him extremely cool in our book. o Oleg Broytmann has taken up the standard of mod_pcgi and moving it to be a really amazing thing, and ready for prime time. o Jephte CLAIN made some patches to European ZopeTime. o Thanks to Gregor Hoffleit for his work in getting Zope into the Debian distribution. o All the other Zopistas far and wide that stuck with us during the Bobo/Principia days and politely push us to make the best damn app server on this or any other planet. o Of course the list of credits would be quite incomplete without mentioning Guido van Rossum, benevolent dictator of Python and long-time friend of Digital Creations. Zope Power is Python Power. o Special thanks to Richard Stallman and the Free Software Foundation for their assistance and feedback on the GPL-compatible 2.0 version of the Zope Public License.