[PSF-Community] [ PSF community ] my introduction

Christian Tismer tismer at stackless.com
Tue Sep 22 16:58:51 CEST 2015


Hi Uche,

yes, I remember very well, it was nice to see you at IPC7 in Houston.
I will not elaborate here, would become too sentimental.

See you next time at PyCon, I hope, talking then.

cheers - chris


On 22/09/15 16:46, Uche Ogbuji wrote:
> I just had to delurk to say "wow!" I've read every single one of these
> intro e-mail messages, despite being in a pretty busy period. I don't
> find them pointless at all, and I particularly enjoyed reading this
> fascinating introduction. Thanks for this, Cliff.
> 
> The first thing that got me hooked on Python, back in '95 or so was its
> readability, but what has really always kept me in this community,
> starting with my trip to IPC7, Houston in '98 [1] has been the people. I
> hope we never grow too large, 700-member mailing list or no, to
> appreciate the individuals who keep it worth sticking around.
> 
> [1] http://legacy.python.org/workshops/1998-11/proceedings.html
> 
> 
> --Uche
> 
> 
> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 1:24 AM, iLoveTux - <me at ilovetux.com
> <mailto:me at ilovetux.com>> wrote:
> 
>     Hello, World:
> 
>     I, too, have been lurking in the background trying to see what the
>     general consensus was around these introductions. As most people
>     seem in favor of them, I've decided to add mine.
> 
>     Online I go by the pseudonym iLoveTux, although my real name is
>     Cliff. I started programming in the '97 with QBasic (that's what was
>     taught in my high school's intro to computer programming class) and
>     moved on to Pascal, but I stuck with QBasic for my hobbyist
>     adventures (I credit this to an online publication called "The
>     QuickBasic Fanzine" which kept my interest). Around this time I got
>     very interested in the move to object oriented programming, and
>     started in on C++ (and subsequently C), but life got in the way of
>     pursuing my career as a software developer.
> 
>     In 2003, I was arrested for three counts of armed robbery and spent
>     5+ years in prison. I was then released on parole in 2008 and
>     pursued any employment I could find. I worked at McDonald's for
>     about 4 years (I made it to manager after 6 months which is about
>     the time I met my loving wife), then I learned how to make hand
>     tossed New York style pizza, which earned me more money than
>     McDonald's. This is about the time that I had my first child, a boy,
>     and I soon became manager of the pizza shop. I then got a job offer,
>     my uncle who I would talk to on the phone about random computer
>     stuff (I never lost my interest in computer programming) had an
>     opening for a developer and wanted me to learn Python, so I hopped
>     on codeacademy and started to learn. A few months later (I still had
>     to work), I was ready to move on and start this new job. It is
>     around this time that I had my second son.
> 
>     Well, my new job was to develop a tool to help manage multiple IBM
>     DataPower appliances. After three rewrites, I have a pretty cool
>     architecture, although right now there is a big cleanup effort going
>     on because I just learned about what are probably the two best, and
>     underutilized tools for working on large applications in Python,
>     setuptools entry_points (for a ready-made plug-in  system), and
>     (while not strictly a Python tool) git submodules. Also, I have
>     incorporated the Anaconda/MiniConda Python Distributions to serve
>     the same purpose as the (new in Python 3.5) embedded distribution of
>     Python. So three new things added to our product caused a major need
>     for some major cleanup, but it's going well especially for a product
>     that has taught me (through trial and error) so much about
>     real-world programming.
> 
>     Also, recently I became enamored with the (new to me) concept of
>     Test Driven Development (remember I had dropped out of the scene
>     from 2003-2013). To start with this concept I created a project
>     called data.store which acts as a primitive database whose syntax is
>     inspired by MongoDB. You can check this out at
>     https://github.com/ilovetux/datastore or just "pip install data.store"
> 
>     Anyway, that's the abbridged version. With an eye to the future I'm
>     pursuing a udacity nano-degree in full stack development and
>     otherwise trying to keep busy. I have also just added my third
>     child, a daughter, to our family. I hope everyone on this list is
>     having as much fun in life as I am!
> 
>     If anyone needs any help our just want to talk shop, you can email
>     me at me at ilovetux.com <mailto:me at ilovetux.com>, and if you want to
>     check out my (not quite abandoned) blog you can find it at
>     www.ilovetux.com <http://www.ilovetux.com>.
> 
>     My other interests in addition to Python:
> 
>     Open Source Software
>     Linux (usually Fedora or CentOS)
>     ksh
>     Docker
>     Splunk
>     XML/XSLT/XPath
>     JQuery
>     HTML/CSS/JavaScript
>     Pandas
>     SQL
>     Regular Expressions
>     And a few others I can't think of right now
> 
> 
>     _______________________________________________
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>     PSF-Community at python.org <mailto:PSF-Community at python.org>
>     https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/psf-community
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Uche Ogbuji                                       http://uche.ogbuji.net
> Founding Partner, Zepheira                  http://zepheira.com
> Author, _Ndewo, Colorado_                 http://uche.ogbuji.net/ndewo/
> Founding editor, Kin Poetry Journal      http://wearekin.org
> http://copia.ogbuji.net    http://www.linkedin.com/in/ucheogbuji 
>   http://twitter.com/uogbuji
> 
> 
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Christian Tismer             :^)   tismer at stackless.com
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