From tobias at caktusgroup.com Fri Sep 3 18:56:40 2010 From: tobias at caktusgroup.com (Tobias McNulty) Date: Fri, 3 Sep 2010 12:56:40 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Caktus seeks two Python/Django devs Message-ID: Hi all, Just wanted to let you know that we're looking for a couple part time Python / Django devs over here at Caktus in Carrboro. Both positions have the possibility of future full time work. The posting is up on our blog: http://www.caktusgroup.com/blog/2010/09/03/caktus-consulting-group-seeks-two-python-django-web-developers/ If you're interested, or know someone who might be, please drop an email to jobs+trizpug at caktusgroup.com . Thanks! Tobias -- Tobias McNulty, Managing Partner Caktus Consulting Group, LLC http://www.caktusgroup.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mrevoir at gmail.com Tue Sep 7 18:54:21 2010 From: mrevoir at gmail.com (Mike Revoir) Date: Tue, 7 Sep 2010 12:54:21 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Fwd: New Nightlight Hours! Plus, Binary Marketing Show / Old Time Jam / 919 Noise / Peter Pendergrass / DJ Steph Russ / Crooked Cabaret In-Reply-To: <4C7D6150.6060002@unc.edu> References: <4C7D6150.6060002@unc.edu> Message-ID: On Tue, Aug 31, 2010 at 4:08 PM, Chris Calloway wrote: There's still a reservation for the September meeting at Duke North > Pavillion. Announcements just haven't been posted yet. There are several > people returning from DjangoCon in September who should have plenty to tell. > > However, I'll get together with you at Nightlight anytime you ask. :) > I've got the room reserved; just waiting on someone to pipe up with discussion topics :) Would anyone going to DjangoCon be willing to give a lightning talk? Anyone else on another topic? Have a nice day, Mike -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cbc at unc.edu Tue Sep 7 20:30:48 2010 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Tue, 07 Sep 2010 14:30:48 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Fwd: New Nightlight Hours! Plus, Binary Marketing Show / Old Time Jam / 919 Noise / Peter Pendergrass / DJ Steph Russ / Crooked Cabaret In-Reply-To: References: <4C7D6150.6060002@unc.edu> Message-ID: <4C8684D8.2010707@unc.edu> On 9/7/2010 12:54 PM, Mike Revoir wrote: > I've got the room reserved; just waiting on someone to pipe up with > discussion topics :) Would anyone going to DjangoCon be willing to give a > lightning talk? Anyone else on another topic? At an impromptu TriZPUG non-meeting a couple of weeks ago, Cacktus indicated they are sending six people to DjangoCon. I suppose they are there now! And they were cajoled into agreeing to give that many lightning talks about the best thing they learned at DjangoCon for the next meeting. So I'm expecting six lightning talks. :) Call it DjangoCon Recap, maybe. And the meeting always should go on whether there's a topic or not. The best meetings haven't had topics in advance. The topic is always... Python! -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway office: 332 Chapman Hall phone: (919) 599-3530 mail: Campus Box #3300, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 From cbc at unc.edu Wed Sep 15 16:43:46 2010 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Wed, 15 Sep 2010 10:43:46 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Python Cookbook Ebook Today Only Message-ID: <4C90DBA2.1080408@unc.edu> *Today only*, the O'Reilly Python Cookbook (a pretty phat book) is only $10 (normally $40) in ebook formats (APK, DAISY, Mobi, PDF, ePub) with discount code DDCCC: http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596007973/ -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway office: 332 Chapman Hall phone: (919) 599-3530 mail: Campus Box #3300, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 From glassresistor at gmail.com Wed Sep 15 23:49:29 2010 From: glassresistor at gmail.com (Michael Clemmons) Date: Wed, 15 Sep 2010 17:49:29 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Carrboro Computer Recyclery Message-ID: Hey Everyone, So this weekend(the 18th at 1pm) is the first official workday for the up and coming Computer repair and community training program. What we want to get done on saturday is: 1) clean out my basement(not much stuff really) 2) install some shelves and tables 3) bring all of our own excess computers to start the parts collection 4) Start repairing and sorting the components we already have. Before Saturday we will need to try and gather some bookshelves, tables, and/or plywood and cinder blocks, any response to this would be great. Once we start sorting I would like to start having an open discussion about our different goals, things we bring to the table, and different groups and organizations we can align ourselves with early on like the pta to help with taking donations and reselling computers. This is not intended to necessarily be the regular hours of operation but simply the first chance to have everyone in the same room and start getting the early hurtles out of the way. My house is at: 101 Thomas Ln. Apt. E-4 Carrboro, NC its right off n. greensboro st. Sincerely, Michael From paul at godley.org Thu Sep 16 02:48:29 2010 From: paul at godley.org (Paul Godley) Date: Wed, 15 Sep 2010 20:48:29 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Python Cookbook Ebook Today Only In-Reply-To: <4C90DBA2.1080408@unc.edu> References: <4C90DBA2.1080408@unc.edu> Message-ID: Thanks! I've been looking at it for only a few minutes and already see some coding habits that I can do more efficiently using other techniques. Totally worth ten bucks. -P On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 10:43 AM, Chris Calloway wrote: > *Today only*, the O'Reilly Python Cookbook (a pretty phat book) is only $10 > (normally $40) in ebook formats (APK, DAISY, Mobi, PDF, ePub) with discount > code DDCCC: > > http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596007973/ > > -- > Sincerely, > > Chris Calloway > office: 332 Chapman Hall ? phone: (919) 599-3530 > mail: Campus Box #3300, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug > http://trizpug.org is the Triangle Zope and Python Users Group > From dragonstrider at gmail.com Sat Sep 18 20:45:50 2010 From: dragonstrider at gmail.com (Joseph Tate) Date: Sat, 18 Sep 2010 14:45:50 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] OT: Free books Message-ID: The following books are up for grabs: C++ Primer 3rd ed., Lipmann, Lajole Effective C++ 2nd ed., Meyers More Effective C++, Meyers Advanced Macroeconomics 2nd ed., Romer Microeconomic Analysis 3rd ed., Varian Image Processing in Java, Lyon Graphic Java 2 3rd ed., Geary Java 2D Graphics, Knudsen Red Hat Linux Unleashed, 3rd ed., Pitts, Ball ASP in a Nutshell, Weissinger Windows 2000 Graphics API Black Book, Chandler, F?tsch I'm in South Durham near Woodcroft Pkwy and Carpenter-Fletcher. Let me know what books you want, and when you can come to get them. I could also bring them to the next TriLUG and/or TriZPUG meetings. -- Joseph Tate Personal e-mail: jtate AT dragonstrider DOT com Web: http://www.dragonstrider.com From Tom_Roche at pobox.com Sat Sep 18 21:15:53 2010 From: Tom_Roche at pobox.com (Tom Roche) Date: Sat, 18 Sep 2010 15:15:53 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Shining Panda? Message-ID: <87y6ay2786.fsf@pobox.com> Anybody using this? http://www.shiningpanda.com/ Definitely sounds cool, but those are, of course, famous last words ... TIA, Tom Roche From j.c.sackett at gmail.com Sat Sep 18 22:05:39 2010 From: j.c.sackett at gmail.com (j.c.sackett) Date: Sat, 18 Sep 2010 16:05:39 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Shining Panda? In-Reply-To: <87y6ay2786.fsf@pobox.com> References: <87y6ay2786.fsf@pobox.com> Message-ID: I just saw a thread on this on news.ycombinator.com; my understanding is that they do know what they're doing, but they are seriously in beta. Worth monitoring and playing with, I would think, but definitely don't bet a production system on it. :-P //j.c.sackett On Sat, Sep 18, 2010 at 3:15 PM, Tom Roche wrote: > > Anybody using this? > > http://www.shiningpanda.com/ > > Definitely sounds cool, but those are, of course, famous last words ... > > TIA, Tom Roche > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug > http://trizpug.org is the Triangle Zope and Python Users Group > -- // j.c.sackett // j.c.sackett at gmail.com // http://blog.humanmade.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From bgailer at gmail.com Sat Sep 18 23:17:23 2010 From: bgailer at gmail.com (bob gailer) Date: Sat, 18 Sep 2010 17:17:23 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Shining Panda? In-Reply-To: <87y6ay2786.fsf@pobox.com> References: <87y6ay2786.fsf@pobox.com> Message-ID: <4C952C63.3070707@gmail.com> On 9/18/2010 3:15 PM, Tom Roche wrote: > Anybody using this? > > http://www.shiningpanda.com/ I visited the website. I for one could use a tutorial, as I can't begin to guess how I'd use it. Or perhaps I am in the category "if you have to ask you don't need to know". Anyone willing to spell out in a little more detail the functions in their flowchart? -- Bob Gailer 919-636-4239 Chapel Hill NC From tbryan at python.net Sun Sep 19 04:45:40 2010 From: tbryan at python.net (Tom Bryan) Date: Sat, 18 Sep 2010 22:45:40 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Shining Panda? In-Reply-To: <4C952C63.3070707@gmail.com> References: <87y6ay2786.fsf@pobox.com> <4C952C63.3070707@gmail.com> Message-ID: <201009182245.40615.tbryan@python.net> On Saturday 18 September 2010 17:17:23 bob gailer wrote: > On 9/18/2010 3:15 PM, Tom Roche wrote: > > Anybody using this? > > > > http://www.shiningpanda.com/ > > I visited the website. I for one could use a tutorial, as I can't begin > to guess how I'd use it. Or perhaps I am in the category "if you have to > ask you don't need to know". I just glanced at it, but the words "continuous integration" tell me most of what I need to know. http://c2.com/xp/ContinuousIntegration.html History: Especially on large systems, it was (and still often is) common for people or entire teams to own large parts of a system. They would work in some isolation so that they didn't have to keep rebuilding the system. (If you have a monolithic C application that takes hours to build and link, it's a very practical concern.) So, people would work on their own sub-system or even on their own module within a sub-system. Then, periodically, all of the recent changes from everyone's private branches would be merged and "integrated" together. Back to your question: Continuous integration is a process that tries to move away from the approach described above. In a language like Python (or Java, Smalltalk, etc.), you don't have long build and link times. Some people still preferred isolated development with periodic integration of all of the modules of the system. Continuous integration is a combination of multiple ideas, but it starts with the belief that developers should see each other's changes as soon as possible. With an SCM system like Subversion or CVS, that normally means that everyone is working on the same branch, and everyone commits often, and everyone updates his local sandbox often. The danger is that someone will check in code that breaks things, and everyone is suddenly impacted. If you update, and someone changed a signature in a library without changing all callers, your sandbox code may suddenly not run (or not compile). If you have a dozen people on your team who suddenly can't run and test code in their sandbox, it's a problem. To avoid that problem, a "continuous integration server" is normally used to monitor the SCM system. When someone commits code, if the server isn't already busy, it checks out a new local sandbox from scratch, builds the entire system (kind of a non-issue for Python), and runs all of the unit tests. It may do other things like run analysis tools like PyChecker or deploy successful builds to a staging server for further automated testing using something like Selenium (for a web application). When most people talk about continuous integration, they're thinking of the CI server. You check in code, it checks out the latest code, builds, and tests. That way, if someone checks in code that breaks the build or unit tests, you'll know right away (often within minutes, depending on how long your tests take to run). That way, everyone knows not to update his sandbox, and the developer who broke the build stops what he's doing and fixes the build. In a small team, it's maybe not essential. It's really useful once you have 10 or so people all working on different parts of the same code base. It's already a big time saver once you have 20 people on a project. It also gets you away from the "works for me" excuse. If it's not working on the CI server, it's not working. :) To make all of this work, development with CI uses some ideas from agile / extreme programming methodology. For example, each commit is some complete piece of functionality. Basically, whatever is on the HEAD of the main development branch builds and works. A feature may not be done, but all of the parts of the code that's checked in work and work with the rest of the system. To avoid potential of widespread build breakage, developers normally try to commit often, developing a feature incrementally. So the real answer to your question: It looks like Shining Panda is a CI system that monitors your project's commits, if you're using one of the hosted development platforms like github. On a successful build and test, it looks like it can deploy the "snapshot" build to various systems, like PyPI. ---Tom From Tom_Roche at pobox.com Sun Sep 19 17:00:27 2010 From: Tom_Roche at pobox.com (Tom Roche) Date: Sun, 19 Sep 2010 11:00:27 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Shining Panda? In-Reply-To: <201009182245.40615.tbryan@python.net> References: <4C952C63.3070707@gmail.com> <201009182245.40615.tbryan@python.net> Message-ID: <87pqw922yc.fsf@pobox.com> bob gailer Saturday 18 September 2010 17:17:23 >> I for one could use a tutorial, Tom Bryan Sat, 18 Sep 2010 22:45:40 -0400 > the words "continuous integration" tell me most of what I need to > know. Correct. > http://c2.com/xp/ContinuousIntegration.html I'd also recommend http://martinfowler.com/articles/continuousIntegration.html > [Often] people [tend to] work on their own sub-system or even on > their own module within a sub-system. Sometimes just on a particular bug, e.g. at a sprint. > Then, periodically, all of the recent changes from everyone's > private branches would be merged and "integrated" together ... and the entire system rebuilt. In the biz, this is known as "big-bang integration": integration followed by destruction, followed by picking up the pieces :-) Two empirical results in the engineering discipline unfortunately known as "computer science" are * the cost of fixing a defect increases monotonically with time from introduction (into the code) * that cost escalation is non-linear > In a small team, it's maybe not essential. Team size is not the only consideration. Another is frequency of access, or freshness of code knowledge. There are projects for which code mod becomes infrequent: e.g. it's pretty stable, the developer(s) have been task-switched. One seeks to make a simple change, thinking one knows the code (which might be one's own), and breaks it. CI == CYA, and to run a well-constructed CI system well-configured for one's project is joy. (I still remember my first successful CruiseControl run. I fell on my knees; being an atheist I don't do that often :-) However configuring any given CI system (e.g. to sense state change in one's SCM) can be more or less of a PITA, hence my query regarding experience with Shining Panda in particular. FWIW, Tom Roche From cbc at unc.edu Mon Sep 20 23:35:09 2010 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Mon, 20 Sep 2010 17:35:09 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Shining Panda? In-Reply-To: <87pqw922yc.fsf@pobox.com> References: <4C952C63.3070707@gmail.com> <201009182245.40615.tbryan@python.net> <87pqw922yc.fsf@pobox.com> Message-ID: <4C97D38D.7000204@unc.edu> On 9/19/2010 11:00 AM, Tom Roche wrote: > However configuring any given CI system (e.g. to sense state change in > one's SCM) can be more or less of a PITA, I assume you mean: http://hudson-ci.org/ which seems to be getting a lot of buzz in the Python world because of: http://wiki.hudson-ci.org/display/HUDSON/Python+Plugin Given the length of blog posts about Hudson, my PITA detector has been going off. Insights? -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway office: 332 Chapman Hall phone: (919) 599-3530 mail: Campus Box #3300, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 From flyingfred0+trizpug at gmail.com Mon Sep 20 23:55:48 2010 From: flyingfred0+trizpug at gmail.com (Chris Church) Date: Mon, 20 Sep 2010 17:55:48 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Shining Panda? In-Reply-To: <4C97D38D.7000204@unc.edu> References: <4C952C63.3070707@gmail.com> <201009182245.40615.tbryan@python.net> <87pqw922yc.fsf@pobox.com> <4C97D38D.7000204@unc.edu> Message-ID: I think this talk at PyCon may have also gotten some buzz going about Hudson: http://us.pycon.org/2010/conference/schedule/event/109/ In short, I'm using it and I like it. Though I only recently set it up, it wasn't that much of a pain. The only major issue I had was setting up a Windows build slave. On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 5:35 PM, Chris Calloway wrote: > On 9/19/2010 11:00 AM, Tom Roche wrote: > >> However configuring any given CI system (e.g. to sense state change in >> one's SCM) can be more or less of a PITA, >> > > I assume you mean: > > http://hudson-ci.org/ > > which seems to be getting a lot of buzz in the Python world because of: > > http://wiki.hudson-ci.org/display/HUDSON/Python+Plugin > > Given the length of blog posts about Hudson, my PITA detector has been > going off. Insights? > > -- > Sincerely, > > Chris Calloway > office: 332 Chapman Hall phone: (919) 599-3530 > mail: Campus Box #3300, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 > > > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug > http://trizpug.org is the Triangle Zope and Python Users Group > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cbc at unc.edu Tue Sep 21 00:01:54 2010 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Mon, 20 Sep 2010 18:01:54 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] TriZPUG September 2010 Meeting: DjangoCon Recap This Thursday Message-ID: <4C97D9D2.9080706@unc.edu> It's that time again: http://trizpug.org/Members/mrevoir/sep-10-mtg/ Mike's hosting at Duke University, North Pavillion, 2400 Pratt St, Durham. Parking after hours in the adjacent deck is free. Walk in the main front doors, down the steps, and halfway down the hall across from the (closed after hours) snack bar. The Caktus gang will be reporting lightning talks from their six-man mission to DjangoCon, of which they were a sponsor. Bring your own lightning talk, also. If we don't get to you this month, maybe next month. It's always good to have a lightning talk in your pocket. I'd like to go to The Federal afterward with anyone who'd like to also: http://carpedurham.com/2010/06/20/the-federal/ -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway office: 332 Chapman Hall phone: (919) 599-3530 mail: Campus Box #3300, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 From dragonstrider at gmail.com Tue Sep 21 19:57:36 2010 From: dragonstrider at gmail.com (Joseph Tate) Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 13:57:36 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] OT: Website monitoring Message-ID: Do any of you have a favorite service for monitoring websites? I don't need 100% uptime, but I also don't think that I should have to pay $$ a month to monitor a website. It seems like it should be more like ??. -- Joseph Tate Personal e-mail: jtate AT dragonstrider DOT com Web: http://www.dragonstrider.com From cbc at unc.edu Tue Sep 21 20:48:40 2010 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 14:48:40 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] OT: Website monitoring In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <4C98FE08.7000204@unc.edu> On 9/21/2010 1:57 PM, Joseph Tate wrote: > Do any of you have a favorite service for monitoring websites? I > don't need 100% uptime, but I also don't think that I should have to > pay $$ a month to monitor a website. It seems like it should be more > like ??. Monitoring a web server or web site? If web server, a ZPUG should recommend Zenoss to you: http://zenoss.org It will run Nagios plug-ins. Cakti, Ganglia, and Munin are also popular for looking at monitor output. But Zenoss is what the cool kids use. There's even a local support guy in the Triangle. For web *site* monitoring, this one is as low as $5/month and was done in Django: http://www.howsthe.com/ But you can do that yourself with a few scripts. The problem is simply hosting your monitor scripts somewhere meaningful. Web site monitoring is all a matter of *where* you are monitoring from. And it measures as much about how up your monitor is as it does how much your site is up. Web server monitoring is generally more useful. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway office: 332 Chapman Hall phone: (919) 599-3530 mail: Campus Box #3300, UNC-CH, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 From jj at email.unc.edu Tue Sep 21 20:14:57 2010 From: jj at email.unc.edu (Johnson, Josh) Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 14:14:57 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] OT: Website monitoring In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: So what do you mean by 'monitoring'? Do you want to know that a website is 'up', that it's functioning (a web app does what it's supposed to), it's not changing, etc... are you interested in metrics, analysis, etc? JJ -----Original Message----- From: trizpug-bounces+josh_johnson=unc.edu at python.org [mailto:trizpug-bounces+josh_johnson=unc.edu at python.org] On Behalf Of Joseph Tate Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2010 1:58 PM To: Triangle (North Carolina) Zope and Python Users Group Subject: [TriZPUG] OT: Website monitoring Do any of you have a favorite service for monitoring websites? I don't need 100% uptime, but I also don't think that I should have to pay $$ a month to monitor a website. It seems like it should be more like ??. -- Joseph Tate Personal e-mail: jtate AT dragonstrider DOT com Web: http://www.dragonstrider.com _______________________________________________ TriZPUG mailing list TriZPUG at python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug http://trizpug.org is the Triangle Zope and Python Users Group From jtim.arnold at gmail.com Tue Sep 21 21:06:06 2010 From: jtim.arnold at gmail.com (Tim Arnold) Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 15:06:06 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] OT: Website monitoring In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 1:57 PM, Joseph Tate wrote: > Do any of you have a favorite service for monitoring websites? I > don't need 100% uptime, but I also don't think that I should have to > pay $$ a month to monitor a website. It seems like it should be more > like ??. > > -- > Joseph Tate > Personal e-mail: jtate AT dragonstrider DOT com > Web: http://www.dragonstrider.com Hi Joseph, This is what I use to monitor my website, and it's free: http://basicstate.com/ --Tim Arnold -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From glassresistor at gmail.com Thu Sep 23 21:12:13 2010 From: glassresistor at gmail.com (Michael Clemmons) Date: Thu, 23 Sep 2010 15:12:13 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Carrboro Computer Recyclery 2nd Meeting Message-ID: Hey everyone, I'd like to keep this short but anyone who is interested should reply back so i can create a new listserv and not keep using multiple ones. The next meeting with be this saturday at 1 like last night. My address is in the original email. We should have some official looking documents up within the week. There had been some talk about going to the hackerspace in Durham but I wasn't able to schedule a good time, so maybe the week after the freemarket. At the meeting we might do a little bit of cleaning and organizing but mostly I will be giving a introduction to computer testing and repair with allot of individual intention so that the people involved could teach others next week. Sorry that I haven't been able to give out all the information at once but if you have questions, concerns feel free to drop me a line as well. Hope to see you all there. Ill be baking cookies. -Mihcael From pgodley at gmail.com Wed Sep 29 15:49:55 2010 From: pgodley at gmail.com (Paul Godley) Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2010 09:49:55 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Job hunting Message-ID: Well, last week I joined that big pot of statistics and got laid off, so I'm looking for a developer position. My recent experience has been mostly with Python and Zope, so I hope this email isn't too much spam. Feel free to contact me with any leads, ideas or tips. Here's my resume: http://www.godley.org/resume Thanks! -P From philip at semanchuk.com Wed Sep 29 15:58:54 2010 From: philip at semanchuk.com (Philip Semanchuk) Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2010 09:58:54 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Job hunting In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <1C24B59F-D628-44C3-9D17-11D16DB195AE@semanchuk.com> On Sep 29, 2010, at 9:49 AM, Paul Godley wrote: > Well, last week I joined that big pot of statistics and got laid off, > so I'm looking for a developer position. My recent experience has been > mostly with Python and Zope, so I hope this email isn't too much spam. > Feel free to contact me with any leads, ideas or tips. Here's my > resume: > > http://www.godley.org/resume You know about this, right? http://www.python.org/community/jobs/ Note the links to python-specific searches on job site on the left-hand side of the page. Good luck Philip From paul at godley.org Wed Sep 29 18:07:05 2010 From: paul at godley.org (Paul Godley) Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2010 12:07:05 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Job hunting In-Reply-To: <1C24B59F-D628-44C3-9D17-11D16DB195AE@semanchuk.com> References: <1C24B59F-D628-44C3-9D17-11D16DB195AE@semanchuk.com> Message-ID: I did not. Thanks! -P On Wed, Sep 29, 2010 at 9:58 AM, Philip Semanchuk wrote: > > On Sep 29, 2010, at 9:49 AM, Paul Godley wrote: > >> Well, last week I joined that big pot of statistics and got laid off, >> so I'm looking for a developer position. My recent experience has been >> mostly with Python and Zope, so I hope this email isn't too much spam. >> Feel free to contact me with any leads, ideas or tips. Here's my >> resume: >> >> http://www.godley.org/resume > > You know about this, right? > > http://www.python.org/community/jobs/ > > Note the links to python-specific searches on job site on the left-hand side of the page. > > > Good luck > Philip > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug > http://trizpug.org is the Triangle Zope and Python Users Group > From pmclanahan at gmail.com Wed Sep 29 22:51:11 2010 From: pmclanahan at gmail.com (Paul McLanahan) Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2010 16:51:11 -0400 Subject: [TriZPUG] Job hunting In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: If you're at all familiar with, or interested in Django, this site is pretty good: http://djangogigs.com/ Also there are decent job boards on Linkedin in the Python and Django groups. Good luck, Paul