From miked at climate.com.au Tue Jan 2 19:32:45 2018 From: miked at climate.com.au (Mike Dewhirst) Date: Wed, 3 Jan 2018 11:32:45 +1100 Subject: [melbourne-pug] Seeking partner(s) Message-ID: <4cb703a4-ce6b-4b77-0c7e-0cf8b586aceb@climate.com.au> Apologies for cross-posting Some of you are aware that I have been working for some time on a significant project. It is now deployed with a few users although there is much still to do. We now need one or more equal partners. The target market is the global chemistry industry (manufacturers and distributors). The product is written in Python/Django on Postgres. The website has more detail www.sharedsds.com including my phone number. If you are interested let me know off-list. I'm looking for one or more people with sufficient drive to eventually take over from me. Cheers Mike From ed at pythoncharmers.com Sun Jan 28 16:40:01 2018 From: ed at pythoncharmers.com (Ed Schofield) Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2018 08:40:01 +1100 Subject: [melbourne-pug] Next Melbourne Python meeting - Monday 5 February Message-ID: Hi all! Our first Python meetup for 2018 is next week, Monday 5 February. We have three talks planned: *1. Fred Rotbart: Hierarchical Temporal Memory in Python* (25-30 minutes) "Hierarchical Temporal Memory is a biologically-constrained theory of intelligence originally described in the book *On Intelligence* (Jeff Hawkins & Sandra Blakeslee). HTM is not a Deep Learning or Machine Learning technology. It is a machine intelligence framework strictly based on neuroscience and the physiology and interaction of pyramidal neurons in the neocortex of the mammalian brain." (from numenta.org). *2. Andrew Stuart: **How to run your Python code in a Run-From-RAM operating system in the cloud *(10 minutes) Andrew has built a system called bootrino to boot Run-From-RAM operating systems in the cloud in order to run Python code fast and securely from Google, Amazon or Digital Ocean servers. *3. Ed Schofield: Data classes: what, when, why?* (15 minutes) Data classes will be a new feature of the Python 3.7 standard library that offers types similar to a mutable namedtuple with defaults. They promise to reduce the need for boilerplate code for classes which store multiple properties. We'll review data classes versus the popular *attrs* and *traitlets* projects. *4. Lightning talks & announcements* *When:* 5.45pm for mingling; talks starting at 6pm *Where:* Outcome-Hub Co-Working Space Suite 1, 121 Cardigan Street, Carlton *How to get there:* Walk 12 minutes north from Melbourne Central station. *Afterwards:* general announcements and pizza. Then maybe drinks on Lygon Street. *Sponsorship:* many thanks to Outcome Hub for providing the venue and Python Charmers for ongoing sponsorship. Please RSVP on Meetup.com so we can track numbers: https://www.meetup.com/Melbourne-Python-Meetup-Group/ We hope to see you there! :-D Best wishes, Ed -- Dr. Edward Schofield Python Charmers +61 (0)405 676 229 http://pythoncharmers.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From fps-pd at optusnet.com.au Mon Jan 29 03:15:14 2018 From: fps-pd at optusnet.com.au (Peter Dwyer) Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2018 19:15:14 +1100 Subject: [melbourne-pug] Next Melbourne Python meeting - Monday 5 February/ Reply Message-ID: Hi Ed Thanks for your email. I?m new to programming but am quite interested in the presentations below. I like to be immersed in things that I understand and also haven?t got a clue ?!? Am I invited to the talks or is this just way too advanced for a newbe? Cheers Pete Dwyer From: melbourne-pug on behalf of Ed Schofield Reply-To: Melbourne Python Users Group Date: Monday, 29 January 2018 at 8:40 am To: Melbourne Python Users Group Subject: [melbourne-pug] Next Melbourne Python meeting - Monday 5 February Hi all! Our first Python meetup for 2018 is next week, Monday 5 February. We have three talks planned: 1. Fred Rotbart: Hierarchical Temporal Memory in Python (25-30 minutes) "Hierarchical Temporal Memory is a biologically-constrained theory of intelligence originally described in the book On Intelligence (Jeff Hawkins & Sandra Blakeslee). HTM is not a Deep Learning or Machine Learning technology. It is a machine intelligence framework strictly based on neuroscience and the physiology and interaction of pyramidal neurons in the neocortex of the mammalian brain." (from numenta.org). 2. Andrew Stuart: How to run your Python code in a Run-From-RAM operating system in the cloud (10 minutes) Andrew has built a system called bootrino to boot Run-From-RAM operating systems in the cloud in order to run Python code fast and securely from Google, Amazon or Digital Ocean servers. 3. Ed Schofield: Data classes: what, when, why? (15 minutes) Data classes will be a new feature of the Python 3.7 standard library that offers types similar to a mutable namedtuple with defaults. They promise to reduce the need for boilerplate code for classes which store multiple properties. We'll review data classes versus the popular attrs and traitlets projects. 4. Lightning talks & announcements When: 5.45pm for mingling; talks starting at 6pm Where: Outcome-Hub Co-Working Space Suite 1, 121 Cardigan Street, Carlton How to get there: Walk 12 minutes north from Melbourne Central station. Afterwards: general announcements and pizza. Then maybe drinks on Lygon Street. Sponsorship: many thanks to Outcome Hub for providing the venue and Python Charmers for ongoing sponsorship. Please RSVP on Meetup.com so we can track numbers: https://www.meetup.com/Melbourne-Python-Meetup-Group/ We hope to see you there! :-D Best wishes, Ed -- Dr. Edward Schofield Python Charmers +61 (0)405 676 229 http://pythoncharmers.com _______________________________________________ melbourne-pug mailing list melbourne-pug at python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/melbourne-pug -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ben+python at benfinney.id.au Tue Jan 30 14:54:26 2018 From: ben+python at benfinney.id.au (Ben Finney) Date: Wed, 31 Jan 2018 06:54:26 +1100 Subject: [melbourne-pug] Next Melbourne Python meeting - Monday 5 February/ Reply References: Message-ID: <854ln3jf65.fsf@benfinney.id.au> Peter Dwyer writes: > Hi Ed > Thanks for your email. Note that the message was sent to everyone in the Melbourne PUG forum, which you are subscribed to. Welcome! > I?m new to programming but am quite interested in the presentations > below. I like to be immersed in things that I understand and also > haven?t got a clue ?!? > > Am I invited to the talks or is this just way too advanced for a newbe? The Melbourne PUG meetings have a wide range of skill representation, from total beginners through to veterans. That is one of its advantages. If you have an interest in Python, you will find many like-minded people at the meet up. -- \ ?A right is not what someone gives you; it's what no one can | `\ take from you.? ?Ramsey Clark | _o__) | Ben Finney From bart at redwolfrosch.com.au Wed Jan 31 23:38:01 2018 From: bart at redwolfrosch.com.au (Bart Wolkowski) Date: Thu, 1 Feb 2018 15:38:01 +1100 Subject: [melbourne-pug] Monday 5th Feb meeting Message-ID: Hello there, Just wondering if Monday's meetup is going ahead and what the details are? Cheers, Bart On 1 February 2018 at 04:00, wrote: > Send melbourne-pug mailing list submissions to > melbourne-pug at python.org > > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/melbourne-pug > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to > melbourne-pug-request at python.org > > You can reach the person managing the list at > melbourne-pug-owner at python.org > > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific > than "Re: Contents of melbourne-pug digest..." > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. Re: Next Melbourne Python meeting - Monday 5 February/ Reply > (Ben Finney) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Wed, 31 Jan 2018 06:54:26 +1100 > From: Ben Finney > To: melbourne-pug at python.org > Subject: Re: [melbourne-pug] Next Melbourne Python meeting - Monday 5 > February/ Reply > Message-ID: <854ln3jf65.fsf at benfinney.id.au> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 > > Peter Dwyer writes: > > > Hi Ed > > Thanks for your email. > > Note that the message was sent to everyone in the Melbourne PUG forum, > which you are subscribed to. Welcome! > > > I?m new to programming but am quite interested in the presentations > > below. I like to be immersed in things that I understand and also > > haven?t got a clue ?!? > > > > Am I invited to the talks or is this just way too advanced for a newbe? > > The Melbourne PUG meetings have a wide range of skill representation, > from total beginners through to veterans. That is one of its advantages. > > If you have an interest in Python, you will find many like-minded people > at the meet up. > > -- > \ ?A right is not what someone gives you; it's what no one can | > `\ take from you.? ?Ramsey Clark | > _o__) | > Ben Finney > > > > ------------------------------ > > Subject: Digest Footer > > _______________________________________________ > melbourne-pug mailing list > melbourne-pug at python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/melbourne-pug > > > ------------------------------ > > End of melbourne-pug Digest, Vol 139, Issue 4 > ********************************************* > -- *Bart Wolkowski* *Director* Redwolf + Rosch | Digital, IT, Sales & Marketing Recruitment Specialists bart at redwolfrosch.com.au | +61 404 499 046 | 181 St. Kilda Road. 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