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Python Success Stories Python is part of the winning formula for productivity, software quality, and maintainability at many companies and institutions around the world. Here are real-life Python success stories, classified by application domain. Contents Software Development Accessibility Assistive Technologies Code Generation Computer Graphics Configuration Cross-platform Development Databases Data Mining Documentation Development Email Embedded Systems Functional Testing Game Development ...
03 Aug. from 4pm UTC to 5pm UTC, 2022
Lesser knowns about Computer Vision: Pre-processing and Feature Extraction
Python Success Stories Introduction This story is about applying Python in the automated CD/DVD disc packaging industry. In the wholesale market, CD/DVD discs are sold in units of 10, 20 or 50 in one shrink-wrapped bulk package. Counting out stacks of discs for these packages is labor-intensive and requires several steps to accomplish: picking up an estimated number of discs from a large stack, verifying the correctness of the number of discs using a disc counter, adding or removing discs t...
From 07 July through 13 July, 2025
Location: Tacoma, WA, USA
SciPy 2025
...about becoming a member of the PSF on our membership page or learn even more about our types of membership on our membership FAQ page.
30 Jan. from 8am UTC to 4pm UTC, 2021
Location: Online
PyCamp LeipzigBarCamp. It is all about Python.
11 Dec. from 6pm UTC to 8pm UTC, 2014
Location: Maxfeldstraße 5, Nürnberg, Germany
Let's meetup and talk about python
...about -- betting all the chips on one player might be riskier than ever in today's climate. For more information, visit VAHNZ Controls on-line at eBukal.vahnzcontrols.com or contact info at vahnzcontrols.com. About the Author Ivan Lehecka is founder of VAHNZ Controls, a company that strives to bring intelligence to building automation and other fields, where suitable. [1]eBukal is a trademark of VAHNZ Controls.
From 15 Aug. through 17 Aug., 2013
Location: gocept gmbh & co. kg, Forsterstraße 29, 06112 Halle (Saale), Germany
Sprint about Pyramid more info under: http://lanyrd.com/2013/pysprints-pyramid/ http://www.pysprints.de/
...about the payment schedule and about how images for the site would be found. 6. Other issues von Löwis asked Kaiser about the status of postal and fax contact addresses for the PSF. Kaiser replied that the PO box is operational and he is receiving mail. Neal Norwitz is also forwarding his mail to Kaiser. Norwitz was using his private fax number for PSF purposes, but Kaiser doesn't have a personal fax. Deibel suggested a fax service that sends a PDF e-mail message for every fax received, a...
10 March from 6pm UTC to 8pm UTC, 2021
Location: Online Event
Python Amsterdam Meetup
...about using the Python license in other projects, and suggested to contact the more prominent projects directly. 4. Contrib forms Martin reported about the discussions with Larry Rosen about the contributor forms. The open issue was the list of initial licenses, for which the patent licensing was of primary concern. If we would require a patent grant from the contributors, a number of common licenses would be ruled out. Tim proposed that we only offer contributors such licenses, and wait for so...
...about anyway, and it doesn't commit you to claiming this sort of "implicit acceptance by use" that the lawyers don't believe will work, which is why they use acceptance ceremonies, ..... You will notice that we're about simplifying here. Most lawyers operate from caution: anything that might ever possibly help they throw into the license. Every place they do business they have a local license adapted to the conditions there, with every little detail thrown in. We're about elegance...
...about 18,000 lines of Python code, 12,000 lines of hand-written C code, and some machine-generated C code. The majority of the code was developed by one person during eight years as part of a research activity. Two modules, some functions, and many ideas were contributed by the user community. Practical experience MMTK and other Python libraries have been the basis for all my research projects for ten years. Many of these projects would not have been possible without the rapid prototyping that...
...about code during development and - more critically - during later maintenance. The fact that Python is so easy to learn has been quite useful as well. Job Vacancies Facility One of our earliest Python projects was a facility for University job vacancies. This was implemented using Zope, an innovative Python-based web application server that provides a range of web components plus powerful facilities for templating and integration. I started the project with a colleague who had more experience...
...about Python and the people who make it great. Radio Free Python A podcast of Python news and interviews by Larry Hastings. From Python import podcast From Python Import Podcast is a bimonthly podcast dedicated to sharing thoughts, opinions, rants, and intelligent discussion about all things Python. A Little Bit of Python An occasional podcast on Python by Michael Foord, Steve Holden, Andrew Kuchling, Dr. Brett Cannon and Jesse Noller. Python411 Python411 is a series of podcasts about Python pre...
...About Armadillo The Armadillo project is an SMTP email filtering proxy that works across multiple domains and platforms. The project came into being to satisfy the needs of partner businesses that produce Windows email servers and provide email hosting with an anti-spam and virus filtering proxy. We considered using and improving on an open source email server but ran into trouble making them work on Windows. Most of the mail servers with significant anti-spam development (see milter.org) are st...
...about working collaboratively, identifying goals, and meeting deadlines. Our team began by meeting with our three advisors to talk about initial design decisions. Professor Bishop presented us with Dr. Dan Jacobson's paper Navigating maps with little or no sight: An audio-tactile approach as a basis for developing a tool that provided access to spatial information through sound and touch. The core components of our system were a Pentium III computer running Windows 2000, a touch pad as the prima...
...about to assess data validity, to name a few. We needed a way to describe this schema once and then reliably produce executable code from it. The Hard Way with C++ Our first implementation of this schema involved a fractured collection of representations. The XML protocol module had tables describing the serialization and deserialization of XML streams. The storage modules had other tables describing the mapping from disk to memory structures. The validation module had its own tables contain...
...about 1400 lines of code, plus 1300 lines describing the world, which is currently over 1500 nodes. When I show Nat's World to friends, they always talk about how great it would be if I could make something like it possible for other people. I've thought about writing a WorldBuilder application. It would let a non-technical person use a GUI to browse images, and connect them into a world of nodes. It would be a nice project to build, and an even nicer one to have since I could use it myself to e...
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