From jek at discorporate.us Wed Aug 1 00:47:52 2007 From: jek at discorporate.us (jason kirtland) Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 15:47:52 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting Message-ID: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> The Meetup group just sent out a reminder that our next meeting is 2 weeks away and the agenda is still TBD. So... what should we do? If no one has a big presentation topic in mind for August, I'll suggest another round of casual short talks / group discussions. Maybe folks who attended OSCON could do a little recap? I'd love to hear a report from the Python 3000 and the multi-core sessions, and a demo of Python powering the Tux Droid would be great. I can also share my experimental 5 minute "new features in Python 2.5 / beginning Python" talk that I kept in reserve at the July meeting. It's an attempt to appeal to both those just starting out and advanced users. Maybe it'll work, maybe it won't. Also, a new pub/bar/restaurant? called "The Morrison Hotel" recently opened up around the corner from CubeSpace. I'm planning on scouting it out for suitability for social meetings and general adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. Cheers, Jason From adam at therobots.org Wed Aug 1 01:18:56 2007 From: adam at therobots.org (Adam Lowry) Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 16:18:56 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> Message-ID: <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> On Tue, July 31, 2007 3:47 pm, jason kirtland wrote: > I can also share my experimental 5 minute "new features in Python > 2.5 / beginning Python" talk that I kept in reserve at the July > meeting. It's an attempt to appeal to both those just starting out > and advanced users. Maybe it'll work, maybe it won't. I wonder, do any of the group members who are newer to Python have anything they've been wondering about? Something they've seen but aren't quite comfortable with? List comprehensions, subprocess module, generators or anything like that? > adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little > between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. I'm up for that. It's near work, so most days happy-hour ish would be fine. Adam From Ron at FascinatingElectronics.com Wed Aug 1 02:32:34 2007 From: Ron at FascinatingElectronics.com (Ron Jackson) Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 17:32:34 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> Message-ID: <46AFD4A2.9030201@FascinatingElectronics.com> I don't know if this would be of use to anyone else, but I'd like to get some feedback on a couple of short Python programs I'm writing. One is a subclass of PySerial which adds a few methods to support the RC Servo hardware I demonstrated last meeting. The other program exercises the RC servos while displaying servo status and sensor information. I'd like these programs to look good to experienced Python programmers, as I plan to submit them with an article I'm writing. Is this something that would be appropriate at a meeting, posted to this mailing list for comment, or is there a different Python forum for this sort of thing? I'd be interested in seeing talks on distribution tools, WxPython and the most Pythonic way to do multithreading. Anyplace that I can get my monthly glass of Hefeweizen is fine with me for the aftermeeting. -- Ron Adam Lowry wrote: > On Tue, July 31, 2007 3:47 pm, jason kirtland wrote: > > >>I can also share my experimental 5 minute "new features in Python >>2.5 / beginning Python" talk that I kept in reserve at the July >>meeting. It's an attempt to appeal to both those just starting out >>and advanced users. Maybe it'll work, maybe it won't. > > > I wonder, do any of the group members who are newer to Python have > anything they've been wondering about? Something they've seen but aren't > quite comfortable with? List comprehensions, subprocess module, generators > or anything like that? > > >>adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little >>between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. > > > I'm up for that. It's near work, so most days happy-hour ish would be fine. > > Adam > _______________________________________________ > Portland mailing list > Portland at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/portland > > -- Website: http://www.FascinatingElectronics.com Fascinating Electronics Inc, 925 SW 83 Avenue, Portland, OR 97225-6307 Toll Free: 800.683.5487 Direct Dial: 503.296.8579 From markgross at thegnar.org Wed Aug 1 06:24:31 2007 From: markgross at thegnar.org (Mark Gross) Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 21:24:31 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> Message-ID: <20070801042431.GB14780@thegnar.org> On Tue, Jul 31, 2007 at 03:47:52PM -0700, jason kirtland wrote: > The Meetup group just sent out a reminder that our next meeting is > 2 weeks away and the agenda is still TBD. So... what should we do? > > If no one has a big presentation topic in mind for August, I'll > suggest another round of casual short talks / group discussions. > Maybe folks who attended OSCON could do a little recap? I'd love > to hear a report from the Python 3000 and the multi-core sessions, > and a demo of Python powering the Tux Droid would be great. The multi-core python wasn't about python so much as it was about the cell in a PS-3. perhaps I was tiered and missed something, but you can check what materials that have been posted so far: http://conferences.oreillynet.com/pub/w/58/presentations.html The Python 3000 presentation by Guido was kind of dull. It was about how to get ready for the switch over and how you should port to 2.6 (when its out) and always use the auto-port tool to make the code 3.0 ready. If it doesn't work then the tool needs to be fixed. Nothing stuck with me as "boy thats going to be cool". The talk was after the mutli-core python and I was having troubles keeping my head up so I must have missed something. looking at the slides posted there is a number of things that are interesting coming, half of which I don't understand, the half I did get left me underwhelmed. --mgross > > I can also share my experimental 5 minute "new features in Python > 2.5 / beginning Python" talk that I kept in reserve at the July > meeting. It's an attempt to appeal to both those just starting out > and advanced users. Maybe it'll work, maybe it won't. > > Also, a new pub/bar/restaurant? called "The Morrison Hotel" > recently opened up around the corner from CubeSpace. I'm planning > on scouting it out for suitability for social meetings and general > adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little > between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. > > Cheers, > Jason > > _______________________________________________ > Portland mailing list > Portland at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/portland -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 191 bytes Desc: Digital signature Url : http://mail.python.org/pipermail/portland/attachments/20070731/f898ea35/attachment.pgp From markgross at thegnar.org Wed Aug 1 06:25:08 2007 From: markgross at thegnar.org (Mark Gross) Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 21:25:08 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> Message-ID: <20070801042508.GC14780@thegnar.org> On Tue, Jul 31, 2007 at 04:18:56PM -0700, Adam Lowry wrote: > On Tue, July 31, 2007 3:47 pm, jason kirtland wrote: > > > I can also share my experimental 5 minute "new features in Python > > 2.5 / beginning Python" talk that I kept in reserve at the July > > meeting. It's an attempt to appeal to both those just starting out > > and advanced users. Maybe it'll work, maybe it won't. > > I wonder, do any of the group members who are newer to Python have > anything they've been wondering about? Something they've seen but aren't > quite comfortable with? List comprehensions, subprocess module, generators > or anything like that? Those all sound good. > > > adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little > > between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. > > I'm up for that. It's near work, so most days happy-hour ish would be fine. > > Adam > _______________________________________________ > Portland mailing list > Portland at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/portland -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 191 bytes Desc: Digital signature Url : http://mail.python.org/pipermail/portland/attachments/20070731/04398786/attachment.pgp From kirby.urner at gmail.com Fri Aug 3 19:58:51 2007 From: kirby.urner at gmail.com (kirby urner) Date: Fri, 3 Aug 2007 10:58:51 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <46AFD4A2.9030201@FascinatingElectronics.com> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@10.8.15.22> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> <46AFD4A2.9030201@FascinatingElectronics.com> Message-ID: > Is this something that would be appropriate at a meeting, posted to this mailing > list for comment, or is there a different Python forum for this sort of thing? > Did you get some feedback on this? I think short code snippets to give the flavor would be fine. If there's something stylistic to comment on, it's probably pervasive, like long_camelCase_Variable_names_used_in_Java or something. Assuming some interest in the Tux Droid, Python programmable, here's a short script just to give the flavor: #!/usr/bin/python # -*- coding: latin-1 -*- import sys sys.path.append('/home/kirby/tuxsetup-1.0-final/tuxdroid/api/python') from tux import * # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Object "tux" is created by tux.py # Your script begins here # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- def spindemo(): tux.tts.select_voice_us_male_tuxed() tux.tts.speak("Hello Tawra. I know how to spin on my butt. Watch") tux.cmd.spinl_on(4) tux.tts.select_voice_us_female_tuxed() tux.tts.speak("Now I have a girl voice.") tux.tts.speak("I still know how to spin on my butt. Watch") tux.cmd.spinl_on(4) spindemo() # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # End of your script # ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- tux.destroy() Documentation looks like this: 1) Class : tux (tuxapi_class.TUXTCPCommunicator) 1.1) Class : tux.cmd (tuxapi_class.TUXcmd) 1.1.1) Function : tux.cmd.audio_channel_general 1.1.2) Function : tux.cmd.audio_channel_tts 1.1.3) Function : tux.cmd.eyes_close ... 1.1.44) Function : tux.cmd.wings_off 1.1.45) Function : tux.cmd.wings_on 1.1.46) Function : tux.cmd.wings_on_free 1.2) Class : tux.daemon (tuxapi_class.TUXdaemon) 1.2.1) Function : tux.daemon.auto_connect 1.2.2) Function : tux.daemon.connect 1.2.3) Function : tux.daemon.disconnect ... 1.6.11) Function : tux.status.lled 1.6.12) Function : tux.status.lwing_bt 1.6.13) Function : tux.status.mouth_closed ... 1.9.5) Function : tux.tts.pause 1.9.6) Function : tux.tts.play 1.9.7) Function : tux.tts.select_voice 1.9.8) Function : tux.tts.select_voice_fr_female 1.9.9) Function : tux.tts.select_voice_fr_female_tuxed ... With each entry looking like this: 1.1.38) Function : tux.cmd.spinl_on Send a command to tux to spin to the left Parameters: "count" as integer : number of quarter turns (default = 4) "speed" as integer : speed of the movement(1..5) (default = 5) Example: >>> tux.cmd.spinl_on() >>> tux.cmd.spinl_on(2) (count = 2) >>> tux.cmd.spinl_on(2,5) (count = 2 and speed = 5) More about Tux Droid in my blog: http://mybizmo.blogspot.com/2007/07/tux-is-alive.html Kirby From Ron at FascinatingElectronics.com Fri Aug 3 23:30:10 2007 From: Ron at FascinatingElectronics.com (Ron Jackson) Date: Fri, 03 Aug 2007 14:30:10 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@10.8.15.22> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> <46AFD4A2.9030201@FascinatingElectronics.com> Message-ID: <46B39E62.9030602@FascinatingElectronics.com> kirby urner wrote: >> Is this something that would be appropriate at a meeting, posted to this mailing >> list for comment, or is there a different Python forum for this sort of thing? >> >> > > Did you get some feedback on this? I think short code snippets to give the > flavor would be fine. If there's something stylistic to comment on, > it's probably > pervasive, like long_camelCase_Variable_names_used_in_Java or something. > > > Kirby, I haven't heard from anyone else on my question. At this point, all my code is short snippets! Is the PDXpython group a social, professional, advocacy, technical, educational or tutorial gathering for software engineers, advanced amateurs or newbies? Seems like it could be any or all of these, and the group may wish to talk about what they want it to be. Back to the topic of Python, the OSCON website has presentation files from many of the talks, including some video. The slides from Guido's talk about Python 3000 and a pdf of David Goodger's talk "Code Like a Pythonista" are available for free download (and both look excellent to me): http://conferences.oreillynet.com/pub/w/58/presentations.html http://conferences.oreillynet.com/presentations/os2007/os_vanrossum.ppt http://conferences.oreillynet.com/presentations/os2007/os_goodger.pdf There is also a talk about Python on multicore processors, but I haven't looked at it: http://conferences.oreillynet.com/presentations/os2007/os_madsen_block.pdf -- Ron -- Website: http://www.FascinatingElectronics.com Fascinating Electronics Inc, 925 SW 83 Avenue, Portland, OR 97225-6307 Toll Free: 800.683.5487 Direct Dial: 503.296.8579 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/portland/attachments/20070803/c6a67dc4/attachment.html From kirby.urner at gmail.com Sat Aug 4 00:25:39 2007 From: kirby.urner at gmail.com (kirby urner) Date: Fri, 3 Aug 2007 15:25:39 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <46B39E62.9030602@FascinatingElectronics.com> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@10.8.15.22> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> <46AFD4A2.9030201@FascinatingElectronics.com> <46B39E62.9030602@FascinatingElectronics.com> Message-ID: On 8/3/07, Ron Jackson wrote: > Is the PDXpython group a social, professional, advocacy, technical, > educational or tutorial gathering for software engineers, advanced amateurs > or newbies? Seems like it could be any or all of these, and the group may > wish to talk about what they want it to be. I think it'll remain someone amorphous and fuzzily defined because of what it is: an open ended user group with plenty of turnover. It'll change its nature depending on who bothers to show up. > Back to the topic of Python, the OSCON website has presentation files from > many of the talks, including some video. The slides from Guido's talk about > Python 3000 and a pdf of David Goodger's talk "Code Like a Pythonista" are > available for free download (and both look excellent to me): As someone who attended both said talks, I can attest to their quality. Mine are there too, although the version at my home site is slightly more up to date: http://www.4dsolutions.net/presentations/connectingthedots.pdf (3.2 Meg) I'll send a replacement to O'Reilly. > There is also a talk about Python on multicore processors, but I haven't > looked at it: > http://conferences.oreillynet.com/presentations/os2007/os_madsen_block.pdf > > -- Ron Didn't make this one. Multicore was a big theme this year. Kirby From kevin at freegeek.org Sat Aug 4 20:40:41 2007 From: kevin at freegeek.org (Kevin Turner) Date: Sat, 04 Aug 2007 11:40:41 -0700 Subject: [portland] oscon recap (was: Planning for the August Meeting) In-Reply-To: <20070801042431.GB14780@thegnar.org> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> <20070801042431.GB14780@thegnar.org> Message-ID: <1186252841.5899.27.camel@grinky> On Tue, 2007-07-31 at 21:24 -0700, Mark Gross wrote: > The multi-core python wasn't about python so much as it was about the > cell in a PS-3. perhaps I was tiered and missed something, but you can > check what materials that have been posted so far: > http://conferences.oreillynet.com/pub/w/58/presentations.html Yeah, there was almost no Python in that talk. It touched on Intel/AMD multicore/multiprocessing a little bit, but it really was about the Cell processor, and talked a lot about how each Cell only has 256k of local storage, etc. You don't get to Python at all until about slide 30 of those 35 slides, with the mention of NetWorkSpaces, RapidMind, and QT Threads, and most of that boiled down to "some literature on these tools makes them sound promising but I have not evaluated them yet." But if you want to go play with http://lindaspaces.com/products/NWS_overview.html and http://nws-py.sourceforge.net/ and present that material, that might be fun. I guess there's a developer kit you can get (from IBM?) that emulates a Cell system, so you don't *need* to have a PlayStation 3 to start investigating the technology... > The Python 3000 presentation by Guido was kind of dull. It was about > how to get ready for the switch over and how you should port to 2.6 > (when its out) and always use the auto-port tool to make the code 3.0 > ready. Jeff was pretty troubled with this one. Jeff, has anyone you talked to since then convinced you that there's a reason Guido is breaking the language? -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part Url : http://mail.python.org/pipermail/portland/attachments/20070804/6b2ade8e/attachment.pgp From kirby.urner at gmail.com Sat Aug 4 21:00:06 2007 From: kirby.urner at gmail.com (kirby urner) Date: Sat, 4 Aug 2007 12:00:06 -0700 Subject: [portland] oscon recap (was: Planning for the August Meeting) In-Reply-To: <1186252841.5899.27.camel@grinky> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@10.8.15.22> <20070801042431.GB14780@thegnar.org> <1186252841.5899.27.camel@grinky> Message-ID: On 8/4/07, Kevin Turner wrote: > On Tue, 2007-07-31 at 21:24 -0700, Mark Gross wrote: > > The multi-core python wasn't about python so much as it was about the > > cell in a PS-3. perhaps I was tiered and missed something, but you can > > check what materials that have been posted so far: > > http://conferences.oreillynet.com/pub/w/58/presentations.html > I did go to talks on parallelism, though not the one above. Intel has released a new open source C++ compiler that's designed for multi-core. Haskell team @ Microsoft is pushing an ACID-based design cribbed from data base world (my world): atomic tasking with rollback and conditional switching. In other words, you could have like a Python try-scope with rollback in case of an exception of type Not_Parallel (e.g. it'd break some synchronization rule) -- in which case try something else. > > The Python 3000 presentation by Guido was kind of dull. It was about > > how to get ready for the switch over and how you should port to 2.6 > > (when its out) and always use the auto-port tool to make the code 3.0 > > ready. > > Jeff was pretty troubled with this one. Jeff, has anyone you talked to > since then convinced you that there's a reason Guido is breaking the > language? Which Jeff is that? Deliberate breakage of the language in going from 2.x to 3.x has been in the cards for like seven years. The question isn't if, but how. That the answers are starting to sound dull is a good sign: means it's already starting to happen. Kirby From jek at discorporate.us Tue Aug 7 01:15:56 2007 From: jek at discorporate.us (jason kirtland) Date: Mon, 06 Aug 2007 16:15:56 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> Message-ID: <4A59F0418B0619FE9D431DED@[10.8.15.22]> Adam wrote: >> jason wrote: >> [try out the Morrison Hotel near CubeSpace] >> adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little >> between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. > > I'm up for that. It's near work, so most days happy-hour ish > would be fine. How about Tuesday this week? Any time 5pm or after is ok for me. -j From adam at therobots.org Tue Aug 7 17:43:50 2007 From: adam at therobots.org (Adam Lowry) Date: Tue, 7 Aug 2007 08:43:50 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <4A59F0418B0619FE9D431DED@[10.8.15.22]> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> <4A59F0418B0619FE9D431DED@[10.8.15.22]> Message-ID: <2AF77B95-99F9-4D8E-A3A8-F8CF2FD729EB@therobots.org> Sure. 5:30ish? Adam On Aug 6, 2007, at 4:15 PM, jason kirtland wrote: > Adam wrote: >>> jason wrote: >>> [try out the Morrison Hotel near CubeSpace] >>> adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little >>> between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. >> >> I'm up for that. It's near work, so most days happy-hour ish >> would be fine. > > How about Tuesday this week? Any time 5pm or after is ok for me. > > -j > From jek at discorporate.us Tue Aug 7 21:11:09 2007 From: jek at discorporate.us (jason kirtland) Date: Tue, 07 Aug 2007 12:11:09 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: <2AF77B95-99F9-4D8E-A3A8-F8CF2FD729EB@therobots.org> References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@[10.8.15.22]> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> <4A59F0418B0619FE9D431DED@[10.8.15.22]> <2AF77B95-99F9-4D8E-A3A8-F8CF2FD729EB@therobots.org> Message-ID: 5:30 sounds good! -jason Adam wrote: > Sure. 5:30ish? > > Adam > > On Aug 6, 2007, at 4:15 PM, jason kirtland wrote: > >> Adam wrote: >>>> jason wrote: >>>> [try out the Morrison Hotel near CubeSpace] >>>> adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little >>>> between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. >>> >>> I'm up for that. It's near work, so most days happy-hour ish >>> would be fine. >> >> How about Tuesday this week? Any time 5pm or after is ok for me. >> >> -j >> > From kirby.urner at gmail.com Wed Aug 8 04:09:31 2007 From: kirby.urner at gmail.com (kirby urner) Date: Tue, 7 Aug 2007 19:09:31 -0700 Subject: [portland] Planning for the August Meeting In-Reply-To: References: <9F08156C184B03B9555BA2B6@10.8.15.22> <46333.64.242.113.150.1185923936.squirrel@merritt.hmdnsgroup.com> <4A59F0418B0619FE9D431DED@10.8.15.22> <2AF77B95-99F9-4D8E-A3A8-F8CF2FD729EB@therobots.org> Message-ID: I got there late, having been to Harry Potter @ Lloyd w/ family. Forgot to take email thinking I could just figure it out. Wrongo! East Side Saloon has lots of tables, in case we ever get more than 5 Python programmers in Portland.[1] 425 The Side Door got my vote for "most personable". [2] Morrison Hotel (finally checked my email at CubeSpace) actually seemed a tad on the dark side. What do others think? OK, time to blog about Harry. Kirby [1] I think Saturday Academy should just do Perl for awhile (along with C++ and C#). Python is so easy, it should just be a prerequisite for other more interesting courses. [2] http://myspace.com/425thesidedoor http://www.yelp.com/biz/9TFRdBf5v7xNHThDp9pPYQ On 8/7/07, jason kirtland wrote: > 5:30 sounds good! > > -jason > > Adam wrote: > > Sure. 5:30ish? > > > > Adam > > > > On Aug 6, 2007, at 4:15 PM, jason kirtland wrote: > > > >> Adam wrote: > >>>> jason wrote: > >>>> [try out the Morrison Hotel near CubeSpace] > >>>> adjournment. If anyone wants to join me for a little > >>>> between-meeting Pythonic outing just let me know. > >>> > >>> I'm up for that. It's near work, so most days happy-hour ish > >>> would be fine. > >> > >> How about Tuesday this week? Any time 5pm or after is ok for me. > >> > >> -j > >> > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Portland mailing list > Portland at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/portland > From kirby.urner at gmail.com Wed Aug 15 07:45:31 2007 From: kirby.urner at gmail.com (kirby urner) Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2007 22:45:31 -0700 Subject: [portland] Lightning Talk Proposals for PPUG 9/11 Message-ID: So far we have three lightning talk proposals, by individuals present at tonight's meeting of the Portland Python User Group: Jason: PyFlakes Kirby: P4E (Programming for Everyone) Kirby: Programming the Tux Droid LTs are only supposed to last 5 minutes, so there's plenty of room for more proposals. Please feel free to add to this list. Kirby From markgross at thegnar.org Wed Aug 15 08:38:38 2007 From: markgross at thegnar.org (Mark Gross) Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2007 23:38:38 -0700 Subject: [portland] Lightning Talk Proposals for PPUG 9/11 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <20070815063838.GB4093@thegnar.org> On Tue, Aug 14, 2007 at 10:45:31PM -0700, kirby urner wrote: > So far we have three lightning talk proposals, by individuals > present at tonight's meeting of the Portland Python User Group: > > Jason: PyFlakes > Kirby: P4E (Programming for Everyone) > Kirby: Programming the Tux Droid I may be able to talk about some basic Python Image Library stuff I've been trying to finish for a home project I've been working on. With only 5 min to fill I think I can safely commit to doing a PIL L-talk. --mgross > > LTs are only supposed to last 5 minutes, so there's plenty > of room for more proposals. Please feel free to add to this list. > > Kirby > _______________________________________________ > Portland mailing list > Portland at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/portland -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 191 bytes Desc: Digital signature Url : http://mail.python.org/pipermail/portland/attachments/20070814/6599568a/attachment.pgp