From michelle at pdxpython.org Fri Feb 10 19:19:40 2012 From: michelle at pdxpython.org (Michelle Rowley) Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2012 10:19:40 -0800 Subject: [group-organizers] Let's meet up at PyCon Message-ID: <27DFAFE8-F234-4713-AA7D-46EBAEB7E2ED@pdxpython.org> Ned Batchelder and I have been talking over the last few months about ways to make Python group organizing easier/better/etc. With PyCon coming up in only four weeks (and under the assumption that we'll have an organizer meetup/BoF/thingy), I thought I would start up some group organizing discussion so we won't have to waste time while we're actually at the conference figuring out what we need to talk about together. One idea Ned and Asheesh Laroia had was to figure out a way for some non-profit to accept donations on behalf of any local user group, and to make sure those funds get used appropriately for that user group. We could use an existing non-profit or make a new one. This would solve the problem of sponsorship without each of us having to create our own non-profit for our group. I think it's a great idea, and I would be willing to do some of the legwork for the non-profit. Related to this idea that each of us does a lot of the same work, separately, for our user groups, Ned and I have been toying with creating reusable resources to share with each other (and other Python organizers). The one example we have so far is a basic grant request form that asks the PSF to pay back fees for Meetup. All one would need to do is change the city name and add some details about the particular group's outreach. We tested it and it worked! I think it would be awesome if we could brainstorm all the ways we repeat work among our groups and how we might create shared resources to cover those cases. Thoughts? Other ideas? I'll keep track of the ideas and put them somewhere. Like, you know, on a wiki or something. Michelle --- Michelle Rowley @pythonchelle http://www.meetup.com/pdxpython -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ned at nedbatchelder.com Sat Feb 11 00:02:07 2012 From: ned at nedbatchelder.com (Ned Batchelder) Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2012 18:02:07 -0500 Subject: [group-organizers] Let's meet up at PyCon In-Reply-To: <27DFAFE8-F234-4713-AA7D-46EBAEB7E2ED@pdxpython.org> References: <27DFAFE8-F234-4713-AA7D-46EBAEB7E2ED@pdxpython.org> Message-ID: <4F35A1EF.3000102@nedbatchelder.com> On 2/10/2012 1:19 PM, Michelle Rowley wrote: > Ned Batchelder and I have been talking over the last few months about ways to make Python group organizing easier/better/etc. With PyCon coming up in only four weeks (and under the assumption that we'll have an organizer meetup/BoF/thingy), I thought I would start up some group organizing discussion so we won't have to waste time while we're actually at the conference figuring out what we need to talk about together. +1 on getting together face-to-face. If the group organizers can't organize a BoF, we need to step down! Michelle, are you taking the formal steps to register the BoF, or whatever it is that has to happen? > One idea Ned and Asheesh Laroia had was to figure out a way for some non-profit to accept donations on behalf of any local user group, and to make sure those funds get used appropriately for that user group. We could use an existing non-profit or make a new one. This would solve the problem of sponsorship without each of us having to create our own non-profit for our group. I think it's a great idea, and I would be willing to do some of the legwork for the non-profit. I should have mentioned this earlier: Boston Python is now set up to use the PSF as their fiscal sponsor (which is the fancy official term for a non-profit collecting money for another group's use). It took a while, but now seems to be working. You can see it in action at http://donate.bostonpython.com (donations welcome!), if you want to see the entire flow, donating $1 seems to be the only way, I had to do that in order to test it in the first place. I think Boston Python and PyTexas are the two organizations set up like this, but I think Kurt (the PSF treasurer) intended that it be used much more widely. > Related to this idea that each of us does a lot of the same work, separately, for our user groups, Ned and I have been toying with creating reusable resources to share with each other (and other Python organizers). The one example we have so far is a basic grant request form that asks the PSF to pay back fees for Meetup. All one would need to do is change the city name and add some details about the particular group's outreach. We tested it and it worked! I think it would be awesome if we could brainstorm all the ways we repeat work among our groups and how we might create shared resources to cover those cases. I'll toss out some ideas: One clear are of reuse is teaching materials. Jessica McKellar has done a great job with the Boston Python Workshop (http://bostonpythonworkshop.com/), creating materials that can be used elsewhere. A perennial problem is finding speakers, but sometimes just ideas for talks get you halfway there. We've recently started a Google Moderator to collect talk ideas (http://ideas.bostonpython.com), and there's no reason ideas, and even prepared talks, couldn't be shared among groups. (BTW: anyone know anything better than Moderator for this? I looked into uservoice.com, but it wants you to login to vote.) We've only recently started recording our sessions, and will be putting them on http://python.mirocommunity.org/. What tips/techniques have people found helpful? --Ned. > > Thoughts? Other ideas? I'll keep track of the ideas and put them somewhere. Like, you know, on a wiki or something. > > Michelle > > --- > Michelle Rowley > @pythonchelle > http://www.meetup.com/pdxpython > > > > > > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: > _______________________________________________ > Group-Organizers mailing list > Group-Organizers at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/group-organizers > From michelle at pdxpython.org Mon Feb 13 23:46:53 2012 From: michelle at pdxpython.org (Michelle Rowley) Date: Mon, 13 Feb 2012 14:46:53 -0800 Subject: [group-organizers] Let's meet up at PyCon In-Reply-To: <4F35A1EF.3000102@nedbatchelder.com> References: <27DFAFE8-F234-4713-AA7D-46EBAEB7E2ED@pdxpython.org> <4F35A1EF.3000102@nedbatchelder.com> Message-ID: <72D8E34E-8A38-4583-82BB-D717438F76E6@pdxpython.org> On Feb 10, 2012, at 3:02 PM, Ned Batchelder wrote: > On 2/10/2012 1:19 PM, Michelle Rowley wrote: >> Ned Batchelder and I have been talking over the last few months about ways to make Python group organizing easier/better/etc. With PyCon coming up in only four weeks (and under the assumption that we'll have an organizer meetup/BoF/thingy), I thought I would start up some group organizing discussion so we won't have to waste time while we're actually at the conference figuring out what we need to talk about together. > +1 on getting together face-to-face. If the group organizers can't organize a BoF, we need to step down! Michelle, are you taking the formal steps to register the BoF, or whatever it is that has to happen? Done - I put us on the list for Saturday at 7pm. Here's the wiki page for the BOF: https://us.pycon.org/2012/community/openspaces/organizers. Please feel free to add more info and topic ideas to the list, and jot down your name if you plan to come! >> One idea Ned and Asheesh Laroia had was to figure out a way for some non-profit to accept donations on behalf of any local user group, and to make sure those funds get used appropriately for that user group. We could use an existing non-profit or make a new one. This would solve the problem of sponsorship without each of us having to create our own non-profit for our group. I think it's a great idea, and I would be willing to do some of the legwork for the non-profit. > I should have mentioned this earlier: Boston Python is now set up to use the PSF as their fiscal sponsor (which is the fancy official term for a non-profit collecting money for another group's use). It took a while, but now seems to be working. You can see it in action at http://donate.bostonpython.com (donations welcome!), if you want to see the entire flow, donating $1 seems to be the only way, I had to do that in order to test it in the first place. I think Boston Python and PyTexas are the two organizations set up like this, but I think Kurt (the PSF treasurer) intended that it be used much more widely. Awesome! I would love to get PDX Python set up like that. I put that as a topic to discuss at the BOF. Ned, would you mind giving us an overview of how you got it set up with Kurt? >> Related to this idea that each of us does a lot of the same work, separately, for our user groups, Ned and I have been toying with creating reusable resources to share with each other (and other Python organizers). The one example we have so far is a basic grant request form that asks the PSF to pay back fees for Meetup. All one would need to do is change the city name and add some details about the particular group's outreach. We tested it and it worked! I think it would be awesome if we could brainstorm all the ways we repeat work among our groups and how we might create shared resources to cover those cases. > I'll toss out some ideas: One clear are of reuse is teaching materials. Jessica McKellar has done a great job with the Boston Python Workshop (http://bostonpythonworkshop.com/), creating materials that can be used elsewhere. > > A perennial problem is finding speakers, but sometimes just ideas for talks get you halfway there. We've recently started a Google Moderator to collect talk ideas (http://ideas.bostonpython.com), and there's no reason ideas, and even prepared talks, couldn't be shared among groups. (BTW: anyone know anything better than Moderator for this? I looked into uservoice.com, but it wants you to login to vote.) > > We've only recently started recording our sessions, and will be putting them on http://python.mirocommunity.org/. What tips/techniques have people found helpful? I added these topics to the list. I'm especially interested in hearing about your experience with recording the meetings and putting them online. Michelle > > --Ned. >> >> Thoughts? Other ideas? I'll keep track of the ideas and put them somewhere. Like, you know, on a wiki or something. >> >> Michelle >> >> --- >> Michelle Rowley >> @pythonchelle >> http://www.meetup.com/pdxpython >> >> >> >> >> >> -------------- next part -------------- >> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... >> URL: >> _______________________________________________ >> Group-Organizers mailing list >> Group-Organizers at python.org >> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/group-organizers >> --- Michelle Rowley @pythonchelle http://www.meetup.com/pdxpython From osamakhan at python.org.pk Fri Feb 17 20:08:50 2012 From: osamakhan at python.org.pk (Osama Kamran Khan) Date: Sat, 18 Feb 2012 00:08:50 +0500 Subject: [group-organizers] Python Pakistan says, Hello World! Message-ID: Hey! We are excited to announce that the Pakistan Python User Group has been formed. We had our first meetup in Karachi and we are coordinating with people from across the country to converge our efforts into local user groups which will operate under the national user group: Python Pakistan < http://www.python.org.pk> Best, Osama -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From starsareblueandfaraway at gmail.com Mon Feb 20 19:10:08 2012 From: starsareblueandfaraway at gmail.com (Roy Hyunjin Han) Date: Mon, 20 Feb 2012 13:10:08 -0500 Subject: [group-organizers] Python Pakistan says, Hello World! In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Le 17 f?vrier 2012 14:08, Osama Kamran Khan a ?crit : > We are excited to announce that the Pakistan Python User Group has been > formed. > > We had our first meetup in Karachi and we are coordinating with people from > across the country to converge our efforts into local user groups which > will operate under the national user group: Python Pakistan < > http://www.python.org.pk> That is great news! Keep up the hard work in building a Python community in Pakistan.