From cbc at unc.edu Mon Dec 1 18:20:42 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Mon, 1 Dec 2014 12:20:42 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Reminder: Raleigh Project Night Message-ID: <547CA36A.1060901@unc.edu> Pizza is likely. http://tripython.org/Members/sgambino/dec-14-rpn When: Tuesday, December 2, 2014, 6-9pm Where: WebAssign, NCSU Centennial Campus, 1791 Varsity Drive, Suite 200, Raleigh """ Raleigh Project Night meets on first Tuesdays. Have a project you want to show off, share, seek help with, or just get some work done surrounded by like minded Python lovers? Join us for our monthly project night and do just that! Don't have something to work on? Just need some help with Python? Show up and enjoy the energy, sprint on an open source project, find something interesting to contribute to or be inspired by! The setting is informal and there is no schedule, so don't worry if you show up past the start time. Whether you are a Python newbie needing help or have an open source project you want to share, come hang out and hack. Plenty of free after hours parking is available in the upper level of the deck behind WebAssign (turn through the median just before the intersection of Varsity and Main Campus Drives). If the door is locked, call the number posted on the door. """ -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From sean at cavanaugh.pro Wed Dec 3 22:30:05 2014 From: sean at cavanaugh.pro (Sean Cavanaugh) Date: Wed, 3 Dec 2014 16:30:05 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Job Opportunity: Python / Web Guru @ Cumulus Networks Message-ID: Hey Python Community. We are looking for someone ideally that is a going to be a new grad or recent grad (e.g. junior level position) so probably the official listing would be 0-2 ys exp? The job is not listed on our website. Just respond with resumes directly to me. We are a startup so its exciting but get ready to move fast!! Skill Requirements: Need to have * Python * HTML * Javascript Nice to have frameworks: * Flask * Bootstrap * jQuery My company is Cumulus Networks. We are a small <100 person startup based in Mountain View, CA. We have a small office which is right now in Downtown Apex, but we are moving up into Cary, NC. Right now our Triangle office is about 15 people. We are very close like a big family :) :) More about Cumulus Networks: http://cumulusnetworks.com/company/about/ Glassdoor: http://www.glassdoor.com/Overview/Working-at-Cumulus-Networks-EI_IE826371.11,27.htm This job would probably evolve a lot and would provide huge opportunities to learn in the future. Job is not contract, direct hire w/ benefits. -Sean Cavanaugh Sr. Consultant Cumulus Networks sean at cumulusnetworks.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sean at cavanaugh.pro Fri Dec 5 16:53:34 2014 From: sean at cavanaugh.pro (Sean Cavanaugh) Date: Fri, 5 Dec 2014 10:53:34 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] About the Jr Level Job Message-ID: Hey Trizpug! Happy holidays :) Sending this mail in regard to some comments I got after positing a Jr Level Job. This was not meant to be 'anti senior people', or trying to hire someone that was senior so we could pay them less. This was simply a job that had limited requirements and the ability grow so the pay would probably match was a new grad would make. Obviously as well you don't have to be 22 and just graduated, that was just a hint at the level pay (which is probably a range this job is not working for me, its my sister-group). Now for senior people who want to work at a startup, WE HAVE JOB LISTINGS!!! Go to-> http://cumulusnetworks.com/careers/ The two jobs that we are hiring and can work out of the Cary office are Technical Support Engineer and the Customer Engineer. These are both very senior roles (as in very technical 5+ years exp is usually encourage) and pay accordingly. The TSE role probably does not apply to a lot of people on this list, think of Cisco TAC or Redhat support. This would be a very technical network engineer or very senior sysadmin with support background and some network experience. We do network support for our clients. Most of our TSE's have a CCIE to give an idea of the type of talent. The customer engineer role in my opinion does apply to this mailer. This role helps develop automation framework using Ansible,Puppet,Chef, etc as well as creating automation around network solutions (OpenStack, VMware, etc). Both of these roles have some overlap but the customer engineer role is a developer type role focused on customer integration where the TSE role is applying and fixing solutions on live networks. Do not send me resumes for those jobs, just apply online. We have hired multiple people from the job board that had no internal references. If there is interest in learning what Cumulus Network is I can come do a talk but I didn't know how relevant a 'product' is for this mailer I was saving up some python code to present at some point :):) -Sean -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cbc at unc.edu Tue Dec 9 18:49:06 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Tue, 9 Dec 2014 12:49:06 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Chapel Hill Project Night Is Tomorrow Message-ID: <54873612.5030208@unc.edu> http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/dec-14-chpn When: Wednesday, December 10, 6-9pm Where: Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI) Biltmore Conference Room, 5th Floor, Europa Center 100 Europa Drive, Suite 590, Chapel Hill """ Chapel Hill Project Night meets on second Wednesdays. Have a project you want to show off, share, seek help with, or just get some work done surrounded by like minded Python lovers? Join us for our monthly project night and do just that! Don't have something to work on? Just need some help with Python? Show up and enjoy the energy, sprint on an open source project, find something interesting to contribute to or be inspired by! The setting is informal and there is no schedule, so don't worry if you show up past the start time. Whether you are a Python newbie needing help or have an open source project you want to share, come hang out and hack. Plenty of free after hours parking is available in the RENCI parking deck. """ -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From david at handysoftware.com Wed Dec 10 17:26:52 2014 From: david at handysoftware.com (David Handy) Date: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 11:26:52 -0500 (EST) Subject: [TriZPUG] Looking for Software Architect / Dev Team Lead opportunity Message-ID: <1418228812.83092026@apps.rackspace.com> Hi Tripython friends - The company I was working for had a big deal fall through around Thanksgiving and laid off over a quarter of their workforce, including myself. My job loss could become your company's gain! :) I'm a Software Architect and technical leader who brings development teams to a higher level. 15 years Python experience, recent Django and OpenStack experience Proven mentoring ability, easy to work with Versatile skills: Coding, design, architecture, requirements gathering, and working directly with customers Please check out my LinkedIn profile, and refer me to anyone looking for a technical leader with strong Python skills: [ https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidrhandy ]( https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidrhandy ) Thanks, David Handy -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cbc at unc.edu Wed Dec 10 22:46:16 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Wed, 10 Dec 2014 16:46:16 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Looking for Software Architect / Dev Team Lead opportunity In-Reply-To: <1418228812.83092026@apps.rackspace.com> References: <1418228812.83092026@apps.rackspace.com> Message-ID: <5488BF28.4080807@unc.edu> I would like to add that David has been active in TriPython for the longest time of any member. He's whip smart, a great developer, super dependable, and the most stand-up guy I know. If you are hiring, you'd be suspect not to hire David. On 12/10/2014 11:26 AM, David Handy wrote: > Hi Tripython friends - > > The company I was working for had a big deal fall through around > Thanksgiving and laid off over a quarter of their workforce, including > myself. > > My job loss could become your company's gain! :) > > I'm a Software Architect and technical leader who brings development > teams to a higher level. > > * 15 years Python experience, recent Django and OpenStack experience > * Proven mentoring ability, easy to work with > * Versatile skills: Coding, design, architecture, requirements > gathering, and working directly with customers > > Please check out my LinkedIn profile, and refer me to anyone looking for > a technical leader with strong Python skills: > > https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidrhandy > > Thanks, > > David Handy > > > > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug > http://trizpug.org is the Triangle Zope and Python Users Group > -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From patrick.reynolds at kitware.com Tue Dec 16 03:17:35 2014 From: patrick.reynolds at kitware.com (Patrick Reynolds) Date: Mon, 15 Dec 2014 21:17:35 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Reminder: TangeloHub talk at Bull City Coworking on Thursday Message-ID: Hi folks, I wanted to send a quick reminder for folks that I'll be talking about and demonstrating TangeloHub, a Python-based web visualization and analytics framework on Thursday. http://www.meetup.com/tripython/events/218650655/ Also, there will be pizza! Thanks, Patrick Reynolds Technical Leader Kitware, Inc. 919 869 8848 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cbc at unc.edu Tue Dec 16 18:58:22 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 12:58:22 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Python Patch Message-ID: <549072BE.5080305@unc.edu> http://www.adafruit.com/products/750 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From cbc at unc.edu Tue Dec 16 20:17:18 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 14:17:18 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] =?utf-8?q?PyCamp_Teen_Per=C3=BA_2014?= Message-ID: <5490853E.9030402@unc.edu> I just heard from one of our members, Andrea Villanes, who is currently teaching a PyCamp for teenagers in Peru. She sent along the following: """ I hope you're doing well! I'm glad to report that PyCamp Teen Peru run smoothly on Sunday! I have written a blog post (http://andreavillanes.com/women-in-technology/pycamp-teen-peru/) about the experience, and we have uploaded photos to our Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.332944533560076.1073741844.219676704886860&type=1). I hope you have a wonderful holiday season, and I will see you in January! """ -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From cbc at unc.edu Tue Dec 16 20:37:41 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Tue, 16 Dec 2014 14:37:41 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] PyCon 2015 Education Summit - Call for Proposals Message-ID: <54908A05.6000706@unc.edu> http://pycon.blogspot.ca/2014/12/pycon-2015-education-summit-call-for.html -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From aikimark at aol.com Wed Dec 17 15:30:46 2014 From: aikimark at aol.com (Mark Hutchinson) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 09:30:46 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths Message-ID: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> One of the Paypal developers penned this Python article: https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10-myths-of-enterprise-python/ Hope to see everyone at the December TriPython meeting on Thursday. Mark -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cbc at unc.edu Wed Dec 17 20:23:40 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 14:23:40 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] PyCon Tutorial Registration Now Open Message-ID: <5491D83C.5030705@unc.edu> http://pycon.blogspot.ca/2014/12/pycon-2015-tutorial-schedule-announced.html -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From cbc at unc.edu Wed Dec 17 20:51:07 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 14:51:07 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths In-Reply-To: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> References: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> Message-ID: <5491DEAB.6020604@unc.edu> On 12/17/2014 9:30 AM, Mark Hutchinson wrote: > https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10-myths-of-enterprise-python/ Thanks. I have to admit, I had not heard of most of these "myths." I'm glad to hear they are just myths. :) But there's a whole lot of good information in that article. I'd heard Python is slow and doesn't have good concurrency support. And the article has great answers for those. I'll add that for a few months last year some people were saying Julia would replace Python for array math applications because of speed. But now Numba (a numpy replacement) is actually faster than Julia. I'd also heard Python was weakly typed. But only third hand. I'd never And obviously misinformed. But I'd never heard it in person. The rest of the myths made me think, "There are people who think that? Really?" I think when you get in a development shop where there are a lot of competing technologies, you run across people who will say anything to try to make their choices look good by spreading FUD about the choices of others. I think the positive about Python, rather than a myth, is that you can do more with Python in far less learning and development time. The article states that repeatedly. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From francois.dion at gmail.com Wed Dec 17 21:01:56 2014 From: francois.dion at gmail.com (Francois Dion) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 15:01:56 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths In-Reply-To: <5491DEAB.6020604@unc.edu> References: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> <5491DEAB.6020604@unc.edu> Message-ID: For the past several days, there was an interesting thread on a Spanish python list regarding this blog post. I was under the impression that it would be easier to find developers in other countries compared to the US, but the conclusion seemed to be that it was not the case. At least in large cities with the usual suspects having offices there. Explains to a certain degree why I'm getting offers on linkedin from europe and latin america... Francois On Wed, Dec 17, 2014 at 2:51 PM, Chris Calloway wrote: > On 12/17/2014 9:30 AM, Mark Hutchinson wrote: > >> https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10- >> myths-of-enterprise-python/ >> > > Thanks. I have to admit, I had not heard of most of these "myths." I'm > glad to hear they are just myths. :) But there's a whole lot of good > information in that article. > > I'd heard Python is slow and doesn't have good concurrency support. And > the article has great answers for those. I'll add that for a few months > last year some people were saying Julia would replace Python for array math > applications because of speed. But now Numba (a numpy replacement) is > actually faster than Julia. > > I'd also heard Python was weakly typed. But only third hand. I'd never And > obviously misinformed. But I'd never heard it in person. The rest of the > myths made me think, "There are people who think that? Really?" I think > when you get in a development shop where there are a lot of competing > technologies, you run across people who will say anything to try to make > their choices look good by spreading FUD about the choices of others. > > I think the positive about Python, rather than a myth, is that you can do > more with Python in far less learning and development time. The article > states that repeatedly. > > -- > Sincerely, > > Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst > UNC Renaissance Computing Institute > 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 > (919) 599-3530 > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > https://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 laffra at gmail.com Wed Dec 17 21:15:35 2014 From: laffra at gmail.com (Chris Laffra) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 15:15:35 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths In-Reply-To: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> References: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> Message-ID: The (interesting) article mentions the Quartz project at Bank of America, where I was the first hire to start. We went from zero to 5,000 Python developers and millions of lines of Python in just 3 years. Amazing results, really. On Wednesday, December 17, 2014, Mark Hutchinson wrote: > One of the Paypal developers penned this Python article: > > https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10-myths-of-enterprise-python/ > > Hope to see everyone at the December TriPython meeting on Thursday. > > Mark > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From david at handysoftware.com Wed Dec 17 21:28:18 2014 From: david at handysoftware.com (David Handy) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 15:28:18 -0500 (EST) Subject: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths In-Reply-To: References: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> Message-ID: <1418848098.904119709@apps.rackspace.com> Given that you can typically get more done with fewer lines of code in Python, there must be some amazing things indeed going on with Quartz! -----Original Message----- From: "Chris Laffra" Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2014 3:15pm To: "Triangle (North Carolina) Zope and Python Users Group" Subject: Re: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths The (interesting) article mentions the Quartz project at Bank of America, where I was the first hire to start. We went from zero to 5,000 Python developers and millions of lines of Python in just 3 years. Amazing results, really. On Wednesday, December 17, 2014, Mark Hutchinson wrote:One of the Paypal developers penned this Python article: [ https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10-myths-of-enterprise-python/ ]( https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10-myths-of-enterprise-python/ ) Hope to see everyone at the December TriPython meeting on Thursday. Mark -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From flyingfred0+trizpug at gmail.com Wed Dec 17 21:37:09 2014 From: flyingfred0+trizpug at gmail.com (Chris Church) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 15:37:09 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths In-Reply-To: References: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> Message-ID: I've heard many of them. Where was this myth-busting article when I needed it years ago? http://code.activestate.com/lists/python-list/458354/ On Wed, Dec 17, 2014 at 3:15 PM, Chris Laffra wrote: > > The (interesting) article mentions the Quartz project at Bank of America, > where I was the first hire to start. We went from zero to 5,000 Python > developers and millions of lines of Python in just 3 years. Amazing > results, really. > > > On Wednesday, December 17, 2014, Mark Hutchinson > wrote: > >> One of the Paypal developers penned this Python article: >> >> https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10-myths-of-enterprise-python/ >> >> Hope to see everyone at the December TriPython meeting on Thursday. >> >> Mark >> > > _______________________________________________ > TriZPUG mailing list > TriZPUG at python.org > https://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 david at handysoftware.com Wed Dec 17 21:37:15 2014 From: david at handysoftware.com (David Handy) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 15:37:15 -0500 (EST) Subject: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths In-Reply-To: <5491DEAB.6020604@unc.edu> References: <14a58a8854e-cf0-60ed@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> <5491DEAB.6020604@unc.edu> Message-ID: <1418848635.452510196@apps.rackspace.com> As a developer who started using Python in 1999, the big benefit was the productivity boost. I felt like my work was going 10x to 2x faster, depending on which programming language I was comparing with. But the productivity boost doesn't come at the expense of quality of the result! All of us live in an information bubble of one type or another, based on our daily experiences and what we come in contact with on a regular basis. So I have met recently even experienced developers who are unfamiliar enough with Python that they are surprised that large scale projects such as OpenStack are implemented in it. Because of that, Python still has that "secret weapon" feel for me, and fellow Pythonistas seem like members of a special group with inside knowledge. Python is still fun for me. :) David H -----Original Message----- From: "Chris Calloway" Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2014 2:51pm To: "Triangle (North Carolina) Zope and Python Users Group" Subject: Re: [TriZPUG] 10 Python Myths On 12/17/2014 9:30 AM, Mark Hutchinson wrote: > https://www.paypal-engineering.com/2014/12/10/10-myths-of-enterprise-python/ Thanks. I have to admit, I had not heard of most of these "myths." I'm glad to hear they are just myths. :) But there's a whole lot of good information in that article. I'd heard Python is slow and doesn't have good concurrency support. And the article has great answers for those. I'll add that for a few months last year some people were saying Julia would replace Python for array math applications because of speed. But now Numba (a numpy replacement) is actually faster than Julia. I'd also heard Python was weakly typed. But only third hand. I'd never And obviously misinformed. But I'd never heard it in person. The rest of the myths made me think, "There are people who think that? Really?" I think when you get in a development shop where there are a lot of competing technologies, you run across people who will say anything to try to make their choices look good by spreading FUD about the choices of others. I think the positive about Python, rather than a myth, is that you can do more with Python in far less learning and development time. The article states that repeatedly. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 _______________________________________________ TriZPUG mailing list TriZPUG at python.org https://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 francois.dion at gmail.com Wed Dec 17 23:49:08 2014 From: francois.dion at gmail.com (Francois Dion) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 17:49:08 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Dr. Dobbs' sunset Message-ID: <8E91EC7C-91B0-430A-99FB-EE7F7CE114CF@gmail.com> http://www.drdobbs.com/architecture-and-design/farewell-dr-dobbs/240169421 Although python was never a primary language at Dr. Dobbs, still, that's sad for all software devs. Francois Sent from my iPhone -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ncdave4life at gmail.com Thu Dec 18 00:33:30 2014 From: ncdave4life at gmail.com (David Burton) Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2014 18:33:30 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Dr. Dobbs' sunset In-Reply-To: <8E91EC7C-91B0-430A-99FB-EE7F7CE114CF@gmail.com> References: <8E91EC7C-91B0-430A-99FB-EE7F7CE114CF@gmail.com> Message-ID: *{sigh}* I remember when it was *Dr. Dobb's Journal of Tiny Basic Calisthenics and Orthodontia.* Dave On Wed, Dec 17, 2014 at 5:49 PM, Francois Dion wrote: > > http://www.drdobbs.com/architecture-and-design/farewell-dr-dobbs/240169421 > > Although python was never a primary language at Dr. Dobbs, still, that's > sad for all software devs. > > Francois > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From aikimark at aol.com Fri Dec 19 05:08:46 2014 From: aikimark at aol.com (Mark Hutchinson) Date: Thu, 18 Dec 2014 23:08:46 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] two links Message-ID: <14a60bbc48d-6f13-23a2@webstg-m01.mail.aol.com> This is for the post-meeting conversation. The phylogeny explorer project: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1493690154202103/ Aron Ra's Living Science Videos project: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCndQsfS-fANYdW_JOMUK65g -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cbc at unc.edu Mon Dec 22 17:43:50 2014 From: cbc at unc.edu (Chris Calloway) Date: Mon, 22 Dec 2014 11:43:50 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] Meeting Pictures Message-ID: <54984A46.70900@unc.edu> Adolfo Neto posted pictures from the December meeting: www.meetup.com/tripython/photos/25804389/ Thank you Kitware for far too much pizza! Thank you Robert to hosting us and allowing us to stay later for a pizza-filled after meeting. See you next year with three monthly project nights! -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway, Applications Analyst UNC Renaissance Computing Institute 100 Europa Drive, Suite 540, Chapel Hill, NC 27517 (919) 599-3530 From aikimark at aol.com Mon Dec 29 03:59:49 2014 From: aikimark at aol.com (Mark Hutchinson) Date: Sun, 28 Dec 2014 21:59:49 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] planning for 2015 presentations Message-ID: <14a93fc3ef7-d9d-5268@webstg-a05.mail.aol.com> I'm thinking about topics for either lightning talks or full presentations that I might do in 2015. In addition to web scraping and web automation (this is the one that involves beer), and working with Excel files (direct reading/writing) without the use of Excel, I wonder if anyone might be interested in binary file I/O, especially with files from Windows applications. What topics would you like to see (from any presenter) in 2015? Mark Hutchinson -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From aikimark at aol.com Mon Dec 29 14:53:55 2014 From: aikimark at aol.com (Mark Hutchinson) Date: Mon, 29 Dec 2014 08:53:55 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] 2015 presentations Message-ID: <14a96531748-43ca-57f7@webstg-a09.mail.aol.com> After watching a Raymond Hettinger video yesterday, I think I would like to see some Python 3 presentations in 2015, such as a ver2->ver3 migration experience and recommendation(s). -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From francois.dion at gmail.com Mon Dec 29 16:15:17 2014 From: francois.dion at gmail.com (Francois Dion) Date: Mon, 29 Dec 2014 10:15:17 -0500 Subject: [TriZPUG] 2015 presentations In-Reply-To: <14a96531748-43ca-57f7@webstg-a09.mail.aol.com> References: <14a96531748-43ca-57f7@webstg-a09.mail.aol.com> Message-ID: El Dec 29, 2014, a las 8:53 AM, Mark Hutchinson escribi?: > After watching a Raymond Hettinger video yesterday, I think I would like to see some Python 3 presentations in 2015, such as a ver2->ver3 migration experience and recommendation(s). I just did one for PYPTUG in october titled "Mystery Python Theater 3K: what should be your next step". Covered a few cases from small to large projects. I think the cam wasnt plugged in a live socket so it died early on the meeting. I might have audio though to go with the slides i made for it. http://www.pyptug.org/2014/10/pyptug-meeting-october-27th.html Francois -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: