On Wed, Dec 18, 2002 at 09:22:44PM -0500, Guido van Rossum wrote:
Sprints for people with Python experience but no experience on a particular code base (e.g. Zope) can work if there's an introductory talk at the beginning. This is how Jim Fulton does most Zope3 sprints. But that takes time away from sprinting (his intro was almost a full day at the recent sprint in Rotterdam).
Sprints need focused projects that have been selected by more experienced developers ahead of time; you can't just get together without a plan and expect much to happen.
Sounds like words of experience. :-)
Would it make sense to have mini-classes throughout the conference? I'd hate to sit down with each new person and have to teach, ssh, cvs, sf (maybe roundup by march?), etc.
Perhaps we could have short classes/tutorials throughout the conference. Maybe a half-hour to an hour. That way people could learn or improve the skills they don't have.
I suggest that we shouldn't try to plan the sprints just yet.
Agreed. I'm just thinking out loud.
Neal: Terriffic. I've started to write up potential lightning talks on the Wiki (http://www.python.org/cgi-bin/moinmoin/PyCon) -- perhaps you could expand this idea there? I really do think that, while it's perhaps not directly relevant to core Python, we could expand the "volunteer" base a lot by teaching some fairly elementary skills. And I'd like to learn some of them myself. Maybe you could point out that "lightning tutorials" will have a slightly different flavor from "lightning talks"? regards ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Steve Holden http://www.holdenweb.com/ Python Web Programming http://pydish.holdenweb.com/pwp/ Bring your musical instrument to PyCon! http://www.python.org/pycon/ -----------------------------------------------------------------------