In sketching out the Python ecosystem in broad brush terms, is it fair to say NumPy gets a lot of US investment whereas PyPy is more an EU pet project? Or is that too broad brush? I sat at the i18n table at OSCON and mostly met up with other North Americans, which can be plenty alien, and with Tatiana from Brazil. Tatiana's dad is a distinguished professor who believes in strong Portuguese literature, and Tati (as she's also known) became my ally when it came to advocating for Python courses in Brazilian Portuguese, and not necessarily translations exactly. Sure there's a place for Business English, but not as the only language of instruction. That was a "booth topic" (one of many) for O'Reilly School of Technology, with Matthew yakking in Russian, Japanese and Portuguese -- and English of course. He was our chief compliance officer during a recent chapter in which we sought to comply with specific rule books, now closed, and this was his first OSCON. In addition to Matthew, Kelly Hoover, Patrick Barton, myself, and Python course authors Steve Holden (Python) and Peter Scott (Perl), our school principal, Debra, manned the booth. Continuing with our i18n theme, two of my students, William and Natasha, both alumni and Russian-speaking, did student profiles with Debra (a standard video format). I haven't seen those yet, nor the three-way interview I joined in the camera booth, set up near to ours. Those video crews are kept busy with gig after gig and enjoyed getting a chance to let off steam at Horse Brass when it was all over. Holden had his OSCON Survivors Breakfast, top of the Hilton, where a couple of the program chairs got to unwind and hear a lot of sincerely positive feedback. Good OSCON this year. I'll close with links to my write-ups: http://worldgame.blogspot.com/2014/07/ramping-up.html http://worldgame.blogspot.com/2014/07/i18n.html http://worldgame.blogspot.com/2014/07/oscon-promo-keynote.html http://controlroom.blogspot.com/2014/07/oscon-2014-tutorials-day-1.html http://controlroom.blogspot.com/2014/07/scala-tutorial-at-oscon.html http://mybizmo.blogspot.com/2014/07/oscon-tutorials-day-2.html http://mybizmo.blogspot.com/2014/07/tutorial-on-nodejs-oscon-day-2.html http://mybizmo.blogspot.com/2014/07/more-keynotes-oscon-xvi.html http://controlroom.blogspot.com/2014/07/oscon-xvi.html http://worldgame.blogspot.com/2014/07/r0mls-talk-why-schools-dont-teach-open... http://controlroom.blogspot.com/2014/07/oscon-xvi-wrap-up.html http://mybizmo.blogspot.com/2014/07/ramping-down.html DjangoCon starts here in town any day now, today in fact: http://www.djangocon.us/ Kirby PS: Pycon in Portland 2016, 2017 woo hoo!
On Sat, Aug 30, 2014 at 12:51 PM, Kirby Urner <kurner@oreillyschool.com> wrote:
In addition to Matthew, Kelly Hoover, Patrick Barton, myself, and course authors Steve Holden (Python) and Peter Scott (Perl), our school principal, Debra, manned the booth.
And of course Christian joined the contingent flying in from Sebastopol, our Russian River area headquarters north of the Bay Area. This was our first time to have our own booth at OSCON. A common query was how to sign up as a mentor, and that's precisely a topic for a company headquarters meeting my supers will be at next week (I'm staying here in Portland, but Patrick is going). I'm hoping we can break it down into temporary contracts attractive to people already doing a lot in their lives, a way to stay in practice exercising inter-personal, not just techie skills. But then I don't want to bore edu-sig with a lot of company business, just wanting to leave a clear record for the ages in a prominent community archive. I'll end with a link to my OSCON photo album from this year (my records cover other OSCONs going back but not to the beginning, when it was the Perl Conference. I was still doing dBase back then. :-D https://www.flickr.com/photos/kirbyurner/sets/72157645488715488/ Sigh. I missed the Python User Group meeting in Portland this week, even though I'm on the organizing committee. We average about 40 per meetup and have a really good meeting space (spacious) with lots of options nearby for socializing more afterwards. Look me up when you're through Portland. I like meeting with other edu-siggers. Kirby
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Kirby Urner