From tshafer at skmurphy.com Wed Apr 4 20:47:04 2018 From: tshafer at skmurphy.com (Theresa Shafer) Date: Wed, 4 Apr 2018 17:47:04 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] Looking for a speaker on Thursday, May 10 Message-ID: I am looking for a speaker on Python for the PATCA consulting group. PATCA ( patca.org) is a group of technical consultants, mostly electronics and embedded engineers. We were interested in getting someone to talk about Python. We have monthly meetings with 12-20 engineers. We meet on a Thursday night in Sunnyvale. Do you know anyone who would be a good speaker for something like "Crash Course on Python" or "Latest Trends in Python"? -- Theresa Shafer www.skmurphy.com 408-252-9676 SKMurphy, Inc. / San Jose, CA Early Customers & Early Revenue -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From bill at baddogconsulting.com Fri Apr 6 16:54:57 2018 From: bill at baddogconsulting.com (Bill Deegan) Date: Fri, 6 Apr 2018 16:54:57 -0400 Subject: [Baypiggies] Python script to modify a large # of HTML files? Message-ID: Greetings, I'm working a website which has html docs for many old versions of the tool. Ideally I'd add the google analytics snippet to them all. Anyone have a nice python script to do something like this? Thanks, Bill -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From shaleh at speakeasy.net Fri Apr 6 21:47:26 2018 From: shaleh at speakeasy.net (Sean Perry) Date: Fri, 06 Apr 2018 18:47:26 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] Python script to modify a large # of HTML files? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <9EFBE5EC-B66C-4F02-8453-4719C51C58DF@speakeasy.net> Make it work for one. The BeautifulSoup package is nice for HTML. Then use find on Linux or OSX to apply it to all of the files. On April 6, 2018 1:54:57 PM PDT, Bill Deegan wrote: >Greetings, > >I'm working a website which has html docs for many old versions of the >tool. >Ideally I'd add the google analytics snippet to them all. > >Anyone have a nice python script to do something like this? > >Thanks, >Bill -- Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From bill at baddogconsulting.com Fri Apr 6 22:48:08 2018 From: bill at baddogconsulting.com (Bill Deegan) Date: Fri, 6 Apr 2018 22:48:08 -0400 Subject: [Baypiggies] Python script to modify a large # of HTML files? In-Reply-To: <9EFBE5EC-B66C-4F02-8453-4719C51C58DF@speakeasy.net> References: <9EFBE5EC-B66C-4F02-8453-4719C51C58DF@speakeasy.net> Message-ID: To clarify I'm not asking how to do it. I understand how to do it. I'm being lazy (a trait of any good programmer) and asking if someone already has created such a script. It seemed like inserting the google analytics JavaScript blurb in a tree full of HTML files might be something others had done in the past.. Thanks, Bill On Fri, Apr 6, 2018 at 9:47 PM, Sean Perry wrote: > Make it work for one. The BeautifulSoup package is nice for HTML. > > Then use find on Linux or OSX to apply it to all of the files. > > > > On April 6, 2018 1:54:57 PM PDT, Bill Deegan > wrote: >> >> Greetings, >> >> I'm working a website which has html docs for many old versions of the >> tool. >> Ideally I'd add the google analytics snippet to them all. >> >> Anyone have a nice python script to do something like this? >> >> Thanks, >> Bill >> > > -- > Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. > > _______________________________________________ > Baypiggies mailing list > Baypiggies at python.org > To change your subscription options or unsubscribe: > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/baypiggies > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com Sat Apr 7 13:53:14 2018 From: jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com (Jeff Fischer) Date: Sat, 7 Apr 2018 10:53:14 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] PyBay: Showcase your technologies to 500+ SF Bay Area Python devs at PyBay2018! Message-ID: Hi Pythonistas Using Python or its libraries or frameworks to power the technologies at your company? You probably already know this, but speaking about how your team solved challenges at tech conferences is a great way to: - elevate your company's engineering brand - attract talent or customers - show off your knowledge and satisfy professional development objectives Optimize your time and exposures by speaking at PyBay, the 3rd annual regional Python conference on August 16-19. Our call for talk proposals (CFP) closes in a week ! Why PyBay? - 500+ Python devs - the largest gathering of SF Bay Area Python developers of the year! - ~95% attendees from SF Bay Area - want local recruits or customers? - 45+ talks, with illustrious names such as Raymond Hettinger (core Python dev), Simon Willison (co-creator of Django) and Yury Selivanov (core Python on async/await). Imagine yourself on the same roster! - Unlimited worldwide viewers on YouTube afterward This year, the community is particularly excited about 25 or 40-minute talks on these themes: - dealing with data (DS, ML, AI too) - infrastructure, automation, and testing - dealing with speed and performance - hacking hardware - the people side of engineering and community Our conference website has more info to help you write a winning proposal, but here are some pro tips: - Get your abstracts in by April 10! You can go through your corporate approval process later if your talk is selected. - The wider the audience your talk appeals to, the better. - Don?t get lost in the weeds, but don?t be afraid to delve into the details--show some code and tell some war stories so developers have something tangible to learn. - In 2017, ~50% identified as mid-level dev, 39% senior. 25% female Bonus: if you?ve thought about delivering a talk at SF Python?s monthly meetup (more than 150 devs attend each one), we?ll be picking the rest of the year's meetup talks from the proposals submitted to PyBay. Questions about your talk idea? Email our speaker team Stephan Fitzpatrick and Jeff Fischer . Questions about PyBay, sponsoring, or other ways to get involved? I?m an email or a phone call (650-823-7236) away. Submit your talk ideas now! -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com Mon Apr 9 14:01:46 2018 From: jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com (Jeff Fischer) Date: Mon, 9 Apr 2018 11:01:46 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] This month's BayPiggies meeting: Special Guest -- Brian Granger Message-ID: *Thursday April 26, 2018 7 pm* This month, we have a special guest, Brian Granger. Brian Granger is a Physics Professor at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. He is the co-creator of Project Jupyter, the widely used open-source interactive notebook application, and Altair, a statistical visualization library for Python. He is an advocate for open-science, open-data and open-source software. Location LinkedIn, Unify Meeting Room 950 W. Maude Ave, Sunnyvale . Meeting Details Meeting Schedule: - 7:00 pm Food and Announcements - 7:15 pm Talk starts - 8:30 pm Networking - 9:00 pm Event ends *RSVP* If you are going, please RSVP on our meetup page, at https://www.meetup.com/BAyPIGgies/events/247080193/ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jjinux at gmail.com Tue Apr 10 15:47:30 2018 From: jjinux at gmail.com (Shannon -jj Behrens) Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 19:47:30 +0000 Subject: [Baypiggies] Python script to modify a large # of HTML files? In-Reply-To: References: <9EFBE5EC-B66C-4F02-8453-4719C51C58DF@speakeasy.net> Message-ID: Consider integrating Google Tag Manager. On Fri, Apr 6, 2018 at 7:48 PM Bill Deegan wrote: > To clarify I'm not asking how to do it. I understand how to do it. > > I'm being lazy (a trait of any good programmer) and asking if someone > already has created such a script. > It seemed like inserting the google analytics JavaScript blurb in a tree > full of HTML files might be something others had done in the past.. > > Thanks, > Bill > > On Fri, Apr 6, 2018 at 9:47 PM, Sean Perry wrote: > >> Make it work for one. The BeautifulSoup package is nice for HTML. >> >> Then use find on Linux or OSX to apply it to all of the files. >> >> >> >> On April 6, 2018 1:54:57 PM PDT, Bill Deegan >> wrote: >>> >>> Greetings, >>> >>> I'm working a website which has html docs for many old versions of the >>> tool. >>> Ideally I'd add the google analytics snippet to them all. >>> >>> Anyone have a nice python script to do something like this? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Bill >>> >> >> -- >> Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Baypiggies mailing list >> Baypiggies at python.org >> To change your subscription options or unsubscribe: >> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/baypiggies >> >> > _______________________________________________ > Baypiggies mailing list > Baypiggies at python.org > To change your subscription options or unsubscribe: > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/baypiggies > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From deirdre at deirdre.net Tue Apr 10 17:30:25 2018 From: deirdre at deirdre.net (Deirdre Saoirse Moen) Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 14:30:25 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] Python script to modify a large # of HTML files? In-Reply-To: References: <9EFBE5EC-B66C-4F02-8453-4719C51C58DF@speakeasy.net> Message-ID: <1523395825.4107968.1333534008.2E029001@webmail.messagingengine.com> Not a direct answer to your question, but I've been tempted to post this for days. I'd not recommend parsing HTML with Regex. https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1732348/regex-match-open-tags-except-xhtml-self-contained-tags/ (best Stack Overflow answer ever) Deirdre On Fri, Apr 6, 2018, at 7:48 PM, Bill Deegan wrote: > To clarify I'm not asking how to do it. I understand how to do it. > > I'm being lazy (a trait of any good programmer) and asking if someone > already has created such a script.> It seemed like inserting the google analytics JavaScript blurb in > a tree full of HTML files might be something others had done in > the past..> > Thanks, > Bill -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From shaleh at speakeasy.net Tue Apr 10 20:18:03 2018 From: shaleh at speakeasy.net (Sean Perry) Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 20:18:03 -0400 Subject: [Baypiggies] Python script to modify a large # of HTML files? In-Reply-To: <1523395825.4107968.1333534008.2E029001@webmail.messagingengine.com> References: <9EFBE5EC-B66C-4F02-8453-4719C51C58DF@speakeasy.net> <1523395825.4107968.1333534008.2E029001@webmail.messagingengine.com> Message-ID: <201804110018.w3B0I3vl008798@mail15c25.carrierzone.com>   Thanks! That was a great laugh. I particularly enjoyed the meta humor of the moderator's comment at the end. On Tue, 10 Apr 2018 14:30:25 -0700, Deirdre Saoirse Moen wrote: p.MsoNormal,p.MsoNoSpacing{margin:0} Not a direct answer to your question, but I've been tempted to post this for days.   I'd not recommend parsing HTML with Regex.   https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1732348/regex-match-open-tags-except-xhtml-self-contained-tags/   (best Stack Overflow answer ever)   Deirdre     -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com Tue Apr 10 23:27:45 2018 From: jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com (Jeff Fischer) Date: Tue, 10 Apr 2018 20:27:45 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] PyBay talk deadline extended! Message-ID: So, you were making that evening coffee to stay up and finish your PyBay 2018 talk proposal that was due tonight at midnight. Good news - you can get a good night's sleep and procrastinate until tomorrow (or after April 17). Grace has extended the PyBay talk submission deadline until *April 21*. However, don't delay too long, earlier submissions will have an advantage during the reviews. Here's the full story from Grace: Hi Pythonistas, By popular requests, call for PyBay2018?s talk proposals has been extended to 4/21 so you can finish your taxes, have a nice cup of coffee, and write that winning abstract to the 3rd Annual regional Python conference on August 16-19! But don't delay, we'll begin reviewing talk submissions before the close date. And I dare say, chances are better if you submit sooner. Seriously, you don?t want to miss out on the chance to present at the largest gathering of Python Devs in the west coast with some of Python?s most influential contributors such as Raymond Hettinger (core Python dev), Simon Willison (co-creator of Django) and Yury Selivanov (core Python on async/await), Carol Willing (core Python on JupyterLab)... This year, the community is particularly excited about 25 or 40-minute talks on these themes: - dealing with data (DS, ML, AI too) - infrastructure, automation, and testing - dealing with speed and performance - python Fundamentals and Popular Python Libraries - hacking hardware - the people side of engineering and community The talks can be about your opensource projects, how you?ve used Python at work or on your personal projects, something cool every Python devs should know about... Our conference website has more info to help you write a winning proposal, but here are some pro tips: - Get your abstracts in by April 21! You can go through your corporate approval process later if your talk is selected. - The wider the audience your talk appeals to, the better. - Don?t get lost in the weeds, but don?t be afraid to delve into the details--show some code and tell some war stories so developers have something tangible to learn. - Consider your audience. 50% of the 450+ attended in 2017 identified themselves as mid-level devs. 39% senior-level. 25% are women Bonus: if you?ve thought about delivering a talk at SF Python?s monthly meetup (more than 150 devs attend each one), we?ll be picking the rest of the year's meetup talks from the proposals submitted to PyBay. Questions about your talk idea? Email our speaker team Stephan Fitzpatrick and Jeff Fischer . Questions about PyBay, sponsoring, or other ways to get involved? I?m an email or a phone call (650-823-7236) away. Submit your talk ideas now! Grace Law PyBay Conference Chair and SF Python Organizer 415-323-0388 / grace at pybay.com ------------------------- And now back to our regularly scheduled HTML parsing discussion... -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From andrewwu at gmail.com Tue Apr 17 12:22:10 2018 From: andrewwu at gmail.com (Andrew Wu) Date: Tue, 17 Apr 2018 09:22:10 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] Job Opening at Apple: Location Software Engineer in Test Message-ID: Hello all! I'm a member of the Location Services team on the testing (QA) side, and we have a strong need for Python developers to help build out our toolset. Our use of Python includes log parsing and sanitization; data analysis (via portions of the PyData stack); web application development; and more. Don't worry if you do not (yet) have a background in location technologies - we are interested in finding strong software generalists, ideally with experience in or interest in learning about the uses above. If interested, you can reply to me here or at my work address: awu at apple.com and mention BayPIGgies and the job opening. Thank you! Andrew P.S. For more information, the full job description and link are below: https://jobs.apple.com/us/search?#&ss=Location%20Software%20Engineer%20in%20Test%20&t=0&so=&lo=0*USA&pN=0&openJobId=113523937 Location Software Engineer in Test - Job Number: 113523937 - Santa Clara Valley, California, US - Weekly Hours: 40.00 Job Summary Join our Location, Motion and Connectivity team and drive innovation that matters! We create and seamlessly integrate technologies that enrich people?s lives and deliver the absolute best user-experience. If you're passionate about building technology that will make a difference, we may have the job for you. The Location, Motion and Connectivity team works on the next generation of location technologies on iOS, MacOS, tvOS and the revolutionary ?Watch. In this position, you will be a key player collaborating with the development team to help conduct experiments to collect test data and validate them for upcoming innovative location features. You'll be part of a highly high-energy team that has delivered amazing location technologies such as GPS, Indoor Location, iBeacon, Auto Unlock of Mac and many more. Our team is seeking a motivated, highly technical and comprehensive individual to help us build the best location experience for our customers. Key Qualifications - Strong analytical skills - Excellent scripting skills, preferably in Python - Deep understanding of SQA test methodologies, practices and concepts - Excellent Debugging skills & experience troubleshooting - Thrive in a collaborative environment and can clearly communicate while confidently driving multiple projects across many teams - Laser-focused on the smallest details that are meaningful to our customers Description You will join a dynamic team responsible for qualifying cutting-edge iOS location features while collaborating with various multi-functional teams. You will design, development and execute new test scenarios, report bugs, solve problems and develop innovative automation tools. Education Bachelors Degree in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, Electrical Engineering, or equivalent experience. Additional Requirements Challenge the design and implementation in a way critical to user experience; design and conduct tests/experiments for algorithm verification and validation You love reporting test results with deep analysis; debugging and diagnosing issues Develop data visualization tools and test automation tools -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sarnold at interana.com Wed Apr 18 12:46:24 2018 From: sarnold at interana.com (Scott Arnold) Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2018 09:46:24 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] Job Opportunity @ Interana - Sr. Back End Engineer - Ineractive Behavioral Analytics (Python) Message-ID: Interna is building best in class, real-time/interactive behavioral analytics products. We seek a senior back-end engineer with expertise in Python to join our growing team! The job description can be viewed below my signature and interested candidates should feel free to reach out to me directly at sarnold at interana.com! Join us! -- Scott Arnold Technical Recruiter Interana sarnold at interana.com *JOB DESCRIPTION:Sr. Back End Engineer (Python)REDWOOD CITY, CAENGINEERINGFULL-TIMEWHO WE AREInterana builds an interactive analytics (Inter-ana, get it?) solution that allows users to ask questions and get answers in seconds, on hundreds of billions of events. Founded in 2013 by a team of executives from Facebook and Intel, we are the leader in analyzing large and sophisticated datasets for our clients including Microsoft, Salesforce, Tinder, and Sonos. Our mission is to iterate on data questions fast so end users can store unlimited rows of data and process hundreds of millions of events per second. We are building the most intuitive, elegant query engine for on-the-fly behavioral analytics in the world, and we are looking to grow our team.ABOUT YOUYou have architected systems on your own, and are familiar with distributed systems and multithreading. You have solved tough problems across different domains; when challenged with big, new problems you are able to come up with a space of possible solutions, advocate for an approach, and implement seamlessly. You are looking to apply your skills to build a fundamentally new product, that will one day be used by digital businesses everywhere. Lastly, you are looking to do this within a small, elite team of engineers, at a company where we strongly value treating each other well and helping each other succeed.WHAT YOU'LL BE DOING - Working On A Custom API Tier For Distributed Query Planning, High Volume Ingest and Metadata Management - We build almost all of our core features from scratch, to best implement and support Interana's unique behavioral analysis engine and its underlying behavioral built-ins like funnels, sessions, cohorts and metrics.- Building New Product Capabilities - We?re building a product unlike any other. Every day we work to solve technical problems in uncharted territory, so that our product can be the best on the market. Features we have worked on in the past include our custom query planner, distributed ingest pipeline, lightweight ETL library using Python generators, incremental metadata management system, query cache and Interana CLI. - Creating a Great Product Experience For Customers - Interana is active 24/7 as it helps our customers analyze billions of rows of sophisticated data. Every engineer knows that bugs happen - but we work hard to try to not only avoid them in the first place, but also fix them as soon as possible. The stakes are high when we log into production environments to diagnose the toughest distributed issues, but the rewards outweigh the risks. - Automated Testing - Our best defense against spending time fixing bugs after we ship, is to plan ahead, and author features that contain a solid battery of unit and integration tests. - Collaborating - We work with our Product, QA, Documentation, Support and other teams to build the best software we can. One of the advantages of being a small startup is that we?re all on a single floor; we have great opportunities to collaborate, share knowledge, and innovate as a team.ESSENTIAL SKILLS - At least 7 years of experience as a backend engineer, or similar- Great engineering skills and strong CS fundamentals (BS in Computer Science or equivalent)- Comfortable writing highly concurrent systems- Strong verbal and written communication skills- Experience working with system performance and resource optimization strategies- Self motivation and team spirit - An ability to take initiative and solve problems without direction from others is crucial. At the same time, we value and appreciate the opportunity to work with each other as a team.- Analytics experience - We work with data daily, so an interest in and experience with collecting, importing, visualizing, exploring, and/or analyzing data is key.BENEFITS - Opportunity to build an amazing product- A chance to work with experienced, kind, and smart people- Health, Vision, Dental, 401K Plan- Meaningful equity for all employees- Lunch provided daily- Subsided transit expenses for commuters- Free onsite parking* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From edwardsglennr at gmail.com Wed Apr 18 13:54:43 2018 From: edwardsglennr at gmail.com (Glenn Edwards) Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2018 10:54:43 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] Contract/Consultant opportunity Message-ID: This is my first email/posting to the site and I am not sure I am following the rules. I could not find a link to a job-posting page, so here is my posting via email. I need a python programmer to write code for my company on a contract basis. Initial assignments will be small and well defined and further assignments will continue to be well-defined. Someone located near Palo Alto is ideal. General: Python 3.2 Target OS: Ubuntu 16.04LTS, Win7 NDA signature is required I am looking for someone adept at file (ASCII and XML) manipulating/handling and developing apps to run on Ubuntu Specific tasks of 1st assignment: Parse an ASCII text file (typ < 100K in size) for specific entries. Modify and copy parsing results to another file Rename and save file Interested persons please reach out with resume and we'll move to the next level of definition. Thanks! Best regards, -- -- Glenn Edwards -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com Fri Apr 20 20:44:24 2018 From: jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com (Jeff Fischer) Date: Fri, 20 Apr 2018 17:44:24 -0700 Subject: [Baypiggies] Reminder: Last call for PyBay talk proposals Message-ID: The final deadline is Saturday at 11:59:59 pm. Here's a message from Grace, with some suggestions for potential speakers: ---------------------- *I am so thrilled to report that there is already a lot of excitement for PyBay2018, the 3rd Annual SF Bay Area Python Conference this August 16-19. Confirmed speakers at this point include: - Raymond Hettinger (core Python dev)- Simon Willison (co-creator of Django) - Yury Selivanov (core Python on async/await)- Carol Willing (core Python on JupyterLab)500+ Python developers are expected to attend, and 95% of them live in the SF Bay Area. It's going to be epic! Don?t miss out and join in on the fun! Show off what you are doing with Python by submitting a talk. CFP closes this Sat 4/21 at midnight! We?ve had some questions along the lines of what makes a good talk, what kind of talks we still need? Here are some examples: - Militarizing Your Backyard with Python: Computer Vision and the Squirrel Hordes - Talk Video - Logging and Testing and Debugging, Oh My! - Talk Video - Type uWSGI; press enter; what happens? - Talk Video - Kubernetes for Pythonistas - Talk Video - Hacking Classic Nintendo Games with Python - Talk Video It also would be great to have more selections on: - The people side of engineering - interview, building teams, becoming a better dev...- Infrastructure / DevOps / Web Dev- Tensorflow- PyPi and other alternative runtimes- Experiences with static typing and PythonTalks can be practical, fun, or both! They have a broad appeal. More importantly, the reviewers can tell from your abstract concrete things attendees can expect to learn and implement, right the way. More tips on writing that winning abstract here. Looking forward to seeing you and/or your team in the not so distant future! Early bird tickets available 4/24 !* Grace Law PyBay Conference Chair and SF Python Organizer 415-323-0388 / grace at pybay.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com Tue Apr 24 21:01:52 2018 From: jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com (Jeff Fischer) Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2018 02:01:52 +0100 Subject: [Baypiggies] Reminder: Talk from Brian Granger, co-creator of Jupyter, this Thursday evening Message-ID: Thursday April 26 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm *Location:* LinkedIn, Unify Meeting Room 950 W. Maude Ave, Sunnyvale . *RSVP:* Please RSVP on our MeetUp page: https://www.meetup.com/BAyPIGgies/events/247080193/ Project Jupyter for User-Centered Data Science Abstract Project Jupyter is an open-source project that exists to develop software, open standards, and services for interactive and reproducible computing. The main application developed by the project is the Jupyter Notebook, a web-application that allows users to create documents that combine live code with narrative text, mathematical equations, and visualizations. Since its creation in 2011, the Jupyter Notebook has become a widely-used, open standard for developing, sharing, communicating, and reproducing computational work in scientific computing and data science. In this talk I will discuss how Jupyter emerged out of Python?s scientific computing community and describe the main ideas upon which Jupyter is founded, along with their motivation and concrete examples of how they work out in practice. These examples will be drawn from the broader usage of Jupyter, as well ongoing work on JupyterLab, JupyterHub, Altair and Binder. Speaker Bio Brian Granger is a Physics Professor at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. He is the co-creator of Project Jupyter, the widely used open-source interactive notebook application, and Altair, a statistical visualization library for Python. He is an advocate for open-science, open-data and open-source software. *Meeting Schedule* - 7:00 pm Food and Announcements - 7:15 pm Talk starts - 8:30 pm Networking - 9:00 pm Event ends -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com Tue Apr 24 22:07:37 2018 From: jeffrey.fischer at gmail.com (Jeff Fischer) Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2018 03:07:37 +0100 Subject: [Baypiggies] Still a few Corporate Early Bird tickets left for PyBay 2018 Message-ID: You?re invited to PyBay 2018 , the third annual SF Bay Area Python conference, on August 16-19 in San Francisco! This is by far the most fun and largest event our friends at SF Python produce. Join 500+ SF Bay Area Pythonistas, plus 45+ amazing speakers including: - Raymond Hettinger (Core Python dev. Seasoned Python trainer) - Yury Selivanov (Core Python on async/await. Founder of EdgeDB) - Rachel Thomas (Selected by Forbes as one of ?20 Incredible Women Advancing AI Research.? Co-founder of fast.ai ) - Simon Willison (Co-creator of Django. Director at Eventbrite) Here's what past attendees say: "Mind. Blown.", "Great conversations during the conference that extended to meeting for coffee 2 weeks later", "We changed our architecture, tools, and approaches as a result of attending PyBay!" More highlights here . *The individual early bird tickets have sold out! The next batch of individual tickets goes on sale April 30. There still are some corporate early bird tickets available: go here to get one while there is still some left!* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: