[Chicago] July 9 ChiPy

Kumar McMillan kumar.mcmillan at gmail.com
Wed Jun 24 21:58:02 CEST 2009


On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 11:44 AM, Massimo Di
Pierro<mdipierro at cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
> I am very much interested in CouchDB.

+1 for CouchDB

> Massimo
> On Jun 24, 2009, at 10:01 AM, Daniel Griffin wrote:
>
> Most people seemed more interested in Couch so I can do that, but I think
> SQLAlchemy would probably be more useful. I still leave it up to everyone
> else to decide.
> CouchDB would consist of:
> -what it is
> - how you use it
> -what it excels at
> -what it sucks at
> - problems with the project/why you shouldn't use this yet
>
> SQLAlchemy would consist of:
> - super brief intro to querying and such
> - dealing with sessions while using threads
> - how to use SQLAlchemy without wanting to die
> - how to set up relations
> - pitfalls
>
> Dan
>
> On Wed, Jun 24, 2009 at 9:51 AM, Carl Karsten <carl at personnelware.com>
> wrote:
>>
>> James Snyder - PyMite (this time for sure!)
>> http://www.pythononachip.org "a significant subset of the Python
>> language on microcontrollers without an OS."
>> PyMite ligntning talk at PyCon09 http://carlfk.blip.tv/file/1996853/
>> "lets Python run in a BILLION new places."
>>
>> And a special guest via the intertubes: Dean Hall, the lead PyMite
>> developer:  "July 9th is open for me and I'd be interested in
>> virtual-attending and helping out with Q&A."    Exactly how that
>> happens is to be determined.
>>
>> Daniel Griffin - couchdb and or sqlalchemy stuff.   If you have any
>> desire to hear about one or the other of these, chime in now before
>> Dan nails down what he is talking about.   Dan, let us know once you
>> are done nailing.
>>
>> And more giveaways!  Some shirts, brains, Learning Python 3rd Edition
>> (2.25 lbs), Python coffee mug and the return of the box of CDs
>> containing 821K Learning Python 4E Chapter 10 and 26.pdf 821K "Unicode
>> and Binary Data, String Changes in 3.0"  - you do get a nice CD sleeve
>> that you can put something important in.  (I apologize to anyone who
>> took one of these thinking it was the whole book.)
>>
>> Last month people showed of how much they knew about Python, which now
>> that I think about it is exactly the wrong way to pick who gets a
>> "Learning Python" book.  So whats a good way to give out a dozen
>> prizes?
>>
>> --
>> Carl K
>> _______________________________________________
>> Chicago mailing list
>> Chicago at python.org
>> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/chicago
>
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