From amk at amk.ca Thu Sep 29 20:04:51 2005 From: amk at amk.ca (A.M. Kuchling) Date: Thu, 29 Sep 2005 14:04:51 -0400 Subject: [Pycon-announce] CFP: PyCon 2006 Message-ID: <20050929180451.GA3857@rogue.amk.ca> PyCon 2006 Call for Proposals -------------------------------------------- Want to share your expertise? PyCon 2006 is looking for proposals to fill the formal presentation tracks. PyCon 2006 will be held February 24-26 2006 in Addison, Texas (near Dallas). Previous PyCons have had a broad range of presentations, from reports on academic and commercial projects to tutorials and case studies, and we hope to continue that tradition this year. As long as the presentation is interesting and potentially useful to the Python community, it will be considered for inclusion in the program. For 2006, we're especially interested in tutorial presentations that will teach conference-goers something new and useful. Can you show attendees how to: use a module? explore a Python language feature? package an application? Important Dates ====================== * Submission deadline: October 31, 2005 * Acceptance deadline: November 15, 2005 * Electronic copy deadline: February 15, 2006 PyCon Topics ======================= Suitable topics for PyCon presentations include, but are not limited to: * Core Python * Other implementations: Jython, IronPython, PyPy, and Stackless * Python libraries and extensions * Databases * Documentation * GUI Programming * Game Programming * Network Programming * Open Source Python projects * Packaging Issues * Programming Tools * Project Best Practices * Embedding and Extending * Science and Math * Web-based Systems Submission Format ================================ Proposals should be 250 to 1000 words long (i.e., one to four pages in manuscript format), containing the following information: * Author name(s) * Contact Information * Requested timeslot (30 minutes, 45 minutes, or either) * Summary of proposed presentation * Presentation outline * Intended audience (non-programmers, beginning programmers, advanced users, CPython developers, etc.) ASCII format is preferred (plain or reST), with HTML as a secondary alternative. If you have any queries about submission, or if you would like to discuss the possibility of submitting in a different format or style, please send mail to the conference organizers at pycon at python.org. Session lengths include time for audience questions. You should budget at least five minutes for questions; for example, a 30-minute talk will be 25 minutes of presentation and 5 minutes of questions. The preferred length for talks is 30 minutes. You can request a 45-minute slot, but proposals requiring 45 minutes will be reviewed more stringently and tutorial talks will be preferred for these longer slots. Submission Mechanics =============================== Use the PyCon Online Proposal Submission to send us your proposals and ideas. If your proposal is accepted, you have the option of including a companion paper along with your presentation. The paper will get published on the PyCon web site. Presentations and papers may be in text (plain or reST), HTML, or PDF; HTML or text are preferred. We suggest, but do not require, that authors place their papers under a Creative Commons license. Please visit the CC 'Choose a License' page to select a license that meets your requirements. A Wiki page has suggestions and advice for speakers: http://wiki.python.org/moin/PyCon2006/SpeakerNotes Other Presentations =========================== If you don't want to make a formal presentation, you can still bring your new project or idea to PyCon. There will be several Lightning Talk sessions for talks no longer than five minutes. There will be a significant amount of Open Space for informal and spur-of-the-moment presentations. Open Space consists of thirty-minute blocks that are allocated during PyCon. These blocks can be used for presentations, round table discussions, hands-on tutorials, or anything else. Typically, people propose ideas for the sessions which are then voted on by attendees.