From cbc at unc.edu Fri Mar 1 12:40:13 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Fri, 1 Mar 2019 17:40:13 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: TriPython February 2019 Meeting: It Asynchronous Make Message-ID: Randy Barlow, who gave such an excellent talk last night, replied to this thread prior to the meeting. But his reply tripped our list content filtering and was discarded automatically by MailMan. (likely because of a disallowed attachment file type or content type). This almost never happens, so I'm perplexed. I'm especially perplexed because the list setting for content filtering is to forward to list owner and not discard. But since his reply did include a link to his presentation materials and rationale, and since Mailman did forward it to me in addition to discarding it, I'm including Randy's reply belatedly here: """ Hey everyone! This talk is going to be interactive. Instead of slides, we're going to do some (embarrasing) live coding with vim and a shell. Bring your laptops, because we can do this multi-player! I've made a git repo you can clone here: https://gitlab.com/bowlofeggs/tripython-feb-2019 We'll be exploring a little toy program I've put in there that shows some simple asyncio concepts. If you bring your laptop, have Python 3.5+ installed, and have that repo, you should be able to play along too! Oh, and maybe have a couple mp3's on your hard drive as well if you want to try out this particular example program. If you want to get some mp3's before you get there (so we aren't too mean to WebAssign's WiFi), you can git clone that repo and run the example program once: $ git clone https://gitlab.com/bowlofeggs/tripython-feb-2019.git $ cd tripython-feb-2019 $ python3 process_rss_feed.py Or you can come and just watch me hit errors in front of a group of people and laugh at me. """ -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 ?On 2/25/19, 5:12 PM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Calloway, Chris" wrote: Looking forward to seeing you this week: http://tripython.org/Members/sgambino/feb-19-mtg When: Thursday, February 28, 2019, 7pm Where: WebAssign, NCSU Centennial Campus, 1791 Varsity Drive, Suite 200, Raleigh What: Randy Barlow presents on the new asyncio standard library. Randy says, "If you are like me, you may have been stuck working with Python 2.7, staring over the fence at Python 3 and wishing you could use all the cool new stuff. Or maybe you couldn't use Python 3 because electric eels keep stinging you whenever you try. Whatever the case may be, we'll be talking in this session about the new asyncio library that was introduced in Python 3.4 and greatly enhanced with the async/await keywords in Python 3.5. Participants will get a high-level overview of the library, and the concepts surrounding asynchronous programming. Maybe we'll even make a fun toy program together, who knows? This would be a great talk to attend if you know Python but haven't taken the time to explore this API." Randy Barlow works full time on the Fedora Project. He is primarily involved in leading development on Bodhi, Fedora's update management system, and with building out Fedora's scaled container registry. He does not enjoy long walks on the beach and is an expert on pizza. Extemporaneous "lightning talks" of 5-10 minute duration are also welcome and don't need to be pre-announced. 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. An after-meeting location for food and beverage will be decided at the meeting (usually BaDa Wings at Mission Valley). Come join us for a fun and informative evening. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 From randy at electronsweatshop.com Sat Mar 2 12:55:09 2019 From: randy at electronsweatshop.com (Randy Barlow) Date: Sat, 02 Mar 2019 12:55:09 -0500 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: TriPython February 2019 Meeting: It Asynchronous Make In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <164ae1b4e10cd8a2ea83c2cd03c6de16eb34be9b.camel@electronsweatshop.com> On Fri, 2019-03-01 at 17:40 +0000, Calloway, Chris wrote: > likely because of a disallowed attachment file type or content type Perhaps it didn't like my PGP signature? From cbc at unc.edu Tue Mar 5 11:18:53 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2019 16:18:53 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: TriPython February 2019 Meeting: It Asynchronous Make In-Reply-To: <164ae1b4e10cd8a2ea83c2cd03c6de16eb34be9b.camel@electronsweatshop.com> References: <164ae1b4e10cd8a2ea83c2cd03c6de16eb34be9b.camel@electronsweatshop.com> Message-ID: This is telling me this was fixed in Mailman 2.1.22: https://bugs.launchpad.net/mailman/+bug/1551075/+editstatus And mail.python.org is at MailMan 2.1.29. So maybe your signature is wrapped in a different way? -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 ?On 3/2/19, 12:55 PM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Randy Barlow" wrote: On Fri, 2019-03-01 at 17:40 +0000, Calloway, Chris wrote: > likely because of a disallowed attachment file type or content type Perhaps it didn't like my PGP signature? _______________________________________________ TriZPUG mailing list TriZPUG at python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug http://tripython.org is the Triangle Python Users Group From cbc at unc.edu Tue Mar 5 14:57:59 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2019 19:57:59 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: Raleigh Project Night Message-ID: I think tonight?s the first Tuesday night. Get your wild coding in before Lent starts. http://tripython.org/Members/kahowell/mar-19-rpn/ When: Tuesday, March 5, 6-9pm Where: Red Hat Annex, 190 E Davie St, Raleigh What: 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. Park in the City Center deck behind Red Hat (the Red Hat elevator in the deck goes into the main Red Hat space, not the Annex). Bring your laptop. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- I think tonight's the first Tuesday night. Get your wild coding in before Lent starts. [1]http://tripython.org/Members/kahowell/mar-19-rpn/ When: Tuesday, March 5, 6-9pm Where: Red Hat Annex, 190 E Davie St, Raleigh What: 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. Park in the City Center deck behind Red Hat (the Red Hat elevator in the deck goes into the main Red Hat space, not the Annex). Bring your laptop. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. http://tripython.org/Members/kahowell/mar-19-rpn/ From cbc at unc.edu Thu Mar 7 10:01:38 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Thu, 7 Mar 2019 15:01:38 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: Analytics>Forward is Saturday Message-ID: If you want a full and engaging day of data science talks, you can?t do any better than Analytics>Forward this weekend. Tickets are only $12 and include breakfast, lunch, all-day coffee and snack breaks. It?s an unconference, so you can bring a talk to pitch in the first morning session. Worth being up at 8am on a Saturday: https://www.meetup.com/Research-Triangle-Analysts/events/258165094/ -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- If you want a full and engaging day of data science talks, you can't do any better than Analytics>Forward this weekend. Tickets are only $12 and include breakfast, lunch, all-day coffee and snack breaks. It's an unconference, so you can bring a talk to pitch in the first morning session. Worth being up at 8am on a Saturday: https://www.meetup.com/Research-Triangle-Analysts/events/258165094/ -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 From cbc at unc.edu Sat Mar 9 16:16:07 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Sat, 9 Mar 2019 21:16:07 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Code for Chapel Hill Hackathon March 16 Message-ID: <11700C87-728A-470B-AE7E-44CC649DFB8C@unc.edu> Here?s a message I received through meetup.com: Hey Triangle Python group, I wanted to let the group (esp those Chapel Hill-based TriPython members) know about an upcoming Hackathon that I organized with the Town of Chapel Hill and the Code for Chapel Hill brigade. I think it would be great for people with experience with Python pandas/geopandas experience. I?ve pasted the event?s blurb below. If you?d prefer, I can also email you the blurb and flyer. My email is garrisonreid at gmail.com. Thanks! On Saturday, March 16, people from a variety of fields and experiences, including high school and university students, data science professionals, citizens, and Town of Chapel Hill staff will join together to work with Open Data (i.e.,publicly available datasets) and discuss solutions that could benefit the Town of Chapel Hill and the greater Chapel Hill community. The event is open to anyone! Attendees should bring their own laptops (and power cords). Experience with computer programming is not required. Lunch will be provided. This event is a partnership with Town of Chapel Hill, Code for Chapel Hill, and Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools. RSVP Link: http://tinyurl.com/ChapelHillOpenData2019 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Here's a message I received through meetup.com: Hey Triangle Python group, I wanted to let the group (esp those Chapel Hill-based TriPython members) know about an upcoming Hackathon that I organized with the Town of Chapel Hill and the Code for Chapel Hill brigade. I think it would be great for people with experience with Python pandas/geopandas experience. I've pasted the event's blurb below. If you'd prefer, I can also email you the blurb and flyer. My email is garrisonreid at gmail.com. Thanks! On Saturday, March 16, people from a variety of fields and experiences, including high school and university students, data science professionals, citizens, and Town of Chapel Hill staff will join together to work with Open Data (i.e.,publicly available datasets) and discuss solutions that could benefit the Town of Chapel Hill and the greater Chapel Hill community. The event is open to anyone! Attendees should bring their own laptops (and power cords). Experience with computer programming is not required. Lunch will be provided. This event is a partnership with Town of Chapel Hill, Code for Chapel Hill, and Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools. RSVP Link: [1]http://tinyurl.com/ChapelHillOpenData2019 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. http://tinyurl.com/ChapelHillOpenData2019 http://tinyurl.com/ChapelHillOpenData2019 From cbc at unc.edu Mon Mar 11 16:06:32 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2019 20:06:32 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: Chapel Hill Project Night Message-ID: <12CB832D-4792-4C35-8149-D1C233AE2F66@unc.edu> Project night at RENCI on Wednesday. Pizza included: http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/mar-19-chpn When: Wednesday, March 13, 6-9pm Where: Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI), Biltmore Conference Room, 5th Floor, Europa Center, 100 Europa Drive, Suite 590, Chapel Hill What: 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. Bring your laptop. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Project night at RENCI on Wednesday. Pizza included: [1]http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/mar-19-chpn When: Wednesday, March 13, 6-9pm Where: Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI), Biltmore Conference Room, 5th Floor, Europa Center, 100 Europa Drive, Suite 590, Chapel Hill What: 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. Bring your laptop. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/mar-19-chpn From cbc at unc.edu Mon Mar 11 16:18:20 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2019 20:18:20 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] TriPython March 2019 Meeting: Pytest Part 2: Making the most of Fixtures Message-ID: <8500A8D3-CB58-4B80-B2F6-3310E50DD641@unc.edu> Tim Hopper is going to school us again about PyTest, this time about PyTest Fixtures, which he introduced in his January TriPython talk. http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/mar-19-mtg/ When: Thursday, March 28, 7pm Where: Caktus Group, 108 Morris St., Durham What: Tim Hopper (https://tdhopper.com/) will present part two (part one was in January) of his talk on PyTest(https://pytest.org/). Tim says, "The Pytest testing framework provides a powerful, but sometimes confusing, model for defining test fixtures for reliable, repeatable execution of tests. I will discuss dependency injection-based fixtures, the benefits of the pytest fixture model, fixture nesting and parameterization, and using the built-in fixtures." Tim Hopper is a senior data scientist at Cylance (https://www.cylance.com) where he works on machine learning approaches to malware detection. Prior to Cylance, he worked in blocking malicious automated web traffic and developing a Python library for nonparametric Latent Dirichlet Allocation (https://tdhopper.com/blog/understanding-probabilistic-topic-models-by-simulation/). He has a masters degree in operations research from North Carolina State University. He lives in Raleigh with his wife and energetic 1 year old. Extemporaneous "lightning talks" of 5-10 minute duration are also welcome and don't need to be pre-announced. Lightning talks are for you to "show and tell" something you've learned about Python recently, no matter how small. We all use Python, therefore, we are always learning something new about Python that we can tell others. Park in the municipal deck on the other side of the Arts Council across W. Morgan St. The after-meeting will be around the corner at Bull McCabe's Irish Pub. Come join us for a fun and informative evening. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Tim Hopper is going to school us again about PyTest, this time about PyTest Fixtures, which he introduced in his January TriPython talk. http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/mar-19-mtg/ When: Thursday, March 28, 7pm Where: Caktus Group, 108 Morris St., Durham What: Tim Hopper ([1]https://tdhopper.com/) will present part two (part one was in January) of his talk on PyTest([2]https://pytest.org/). Tim says, "The Pytest testing framework provides a powerful, but sometimes confusing, model for defining test fixtures for reliable, repeatable execution of tests. I will discuss dependency injection-based fixtures, the benefits of the pytest fixture model, fixture nesting and parameterization, and using the built-in fixtures." Tim Hopper is a senior data scientist at Cylance ([3]https://www.cylance.com) where he works on machine learning approaches to malware detection. Prior to Cylance, he worked in blocking malicious automated web traffic and developing a Python library for nonparametric Latent Dirichlet Allocation ([4]https://tdhopper.com/blog/understanding-probabilistic-topic-models-by-simulation/). He has a masters degree in operations research from North Carolina State University. He lives in Raleigh with his wife and energetic 1 year old. Extemporaneous "lightning talks" of 5-10 minute duration are also welcome and don't need to be pre-announced. Lightning talks are for you to "show and tell" something you've learned about Python recently, no matter how small. We all use Python, therefore, we are always learning something new about Python that we can tell others. Park in the municipal deck on the other side of the Arts Council across W. Morgan St. The after-meeting will be around the corner at Bull McCabe's Irish Pub. Come join us for a fun and informative evening. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. https://tdhopper.com/ https://tdhopper.com/ 2. https://pytest.org/ https://pytest.org/ 3. https://www.cylance.com https://www.cylance.com/ 4. https://tdhopper.com/blog/understanding-probabilistic-topic-models-by-simulation/ https://tdhopper.com/blog/understanding-probabilistic-topic-models-by-simulation/ From philip at semanchuk.com Wed Mar 13 19:17:18 2019 From: philip at semanchuk.com (Philip Semanchuk) Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2019 19:17:18 -0400 Subject: [TriPython] Looking for Python engineer Message-ID: <6C4F5380-4C7B-4C69-B043-EE6FC098092C@semanchuk.com> Hi all, One of my Durham-based clients (AmericanEfficient.com) is looking for a mid- to senior level Python engineer, preferably local. Python, relational database (preferably Postgres) and data modeling skills are important. ETL experience is helpful. Frontend experience and data science skills are nice to have, but not essential. Contract, contract-to-staff, and staff employment are all possibilities. I?ve worked with this client for almost a year. It?s a warm, friendly, intelligent group and I enjoy working with them. You?d probably end up working closely with me; I?ll let you decide whether you consider that a plus or a minus. :-) To be clear, this is a client for whom I do freelance work. If you ended up contracting, your contract would be directly with them (unless you want some other arrangement). Feel free to email me for details, or contact Tyler Curtis (tcurtis at americanefficient.com). Cheers Philip From cbc at unc.edu Thu Mar 14 10:34:25 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2019 14:34:25 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Django Wed Developer Position at Caktus Message-ID: Opportunity at Caktus: ??? We have a contractor position for a Django Wed Developer open at Caktus, and was wondering if you would be willing to share the posting with your community? Here is the link: https://caktus.recruiterbox.com/jobs/fk0mpu5?source=TriPython ??? Please let Kel, khanna at caktusgroup.com, know if you have any questions or need any additional information. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Opportunity at Caktus: `'' We have a contractor position for a Django Wed Developer open at Caktus, and was wondering if you would be willing to share the posting with your community? Here is the link: [1]https://caktus.recruiterbox.com/jobs/fk0mpu5?source=TriPython `'' Please let Kel, khanna at caktusgroup.com, know if you have any questions or need any additional information. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. https://caktus.recruiterbox.com/jobs/fk0mpu5?source=TriPython From cbc at unc.edu Thu Mar 14 10:56:38 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2019 14:56:38 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] DevOps Senior Research Software Developer at RENCI Message-ID: Come work with me: https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/157550 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Come work with me: https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/157550 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 From cbc at unc.edu Thu Mar 14 13:32:33 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2019 17:32:33 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] DevOps Senior Research Software Developer at RENCI Message-ID: <2347A41D-0228-4DDE-80D6-2E65585CA143@unc.edu> I was just alerted by my manager that the requirement for a PhD in the listing is erroneous and it hopefully being fixed by HR. The listing should read "Masters (preferred) or Bachelor?s in computer science or related field. Amount and type of experience may be a viable substitute for specific degree field listed." -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 ?On 3/14/19, 10:56 AM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Calloway, Chris" wrote: Come work with me: https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/157550 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 From thomson at neuro.duke.edu Mon Mar 18 09:11:02 2019 From: thomson at neuro.duke.edu (Eric Thomson) Date: Mon, 18 Mar 2019 13:11:02 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Durham Project Night Tonight 6pm @Caktus In-Reply-To: References: , , , , Message-ID: Just a reminder that tonight is Project Night in Durham. If you are an absolute beginner just getting started, or have a project well underway you want to tinker with, all are welcome. The setting is informal and there is no schedule, so folks are welcome to come at any point during the evening (at about 7PM folks introduce ourselves and what they are working on). Hope to see you there! Thanks, as always, to Caktus for providing the meeting space and pizza. Details: When: Monday, March 18, 6-9pm Where: Caktus Group Tech Space, 108 Morris St., Durham What: Join us for our monthly project night to tinker, discuss all things Python, and refuel. If you don't have something specific you are working on, that's fine; if you just need help getting started with Python bring your laptop and we will help. If you are a veteran programmer, come on by for code and pizza. It's an informal meetup where people work on projects, talk about programming, and give and receive tips on all things Python. From cbc at unc.edu Tue Mar 19 10:39:39 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2019 14:39:39 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] DevOps Senior Research Software Developer at RENCI In-Reply-To: <2347A41D-0228-4DDE-80D6-2E65585CA143@unc.edu> References: <2347A41D-0228-4DDE-80D6-2E65585CA143@unc.edu> Message-ID: <9B5CB0AF-530F-4647-8BF3-26C465A89E9E@unc.edu> This link for this job posting has changed to: http://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/158344 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 ?On 3/14/19, 1:32 PM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Calloway, Chris" wrote: I was just alerted by my manager that the requirement for a PhD in the listing is erroneous and it hopefully being fixed by HR. The listing should read "Masters (preferred) or Bachelor?s in computer science or related field. Amount and type of experience may be a viable substitute for specific degree field listed." -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 On 3/14/19, 10:56 AM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Calloway, Chris" wrote: Come work with me: https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/157550 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 _______________________________________________ TriZPUG mailing list TriZPUG at python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug http://tripython.org is the Triangle Python Users Group From cbc at unc.edu Tue Mar 19 12:57:47 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2019 16:57:47 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] DevOps Senior Research Software Developer at RENCI In-Reply-To: <9B5CB0AF-530F-4647-8BF3-26C465A89E9E@unc.edu> References: <2347A41D-0228-4DDE-80D6-2E65585CA143@unc.edu> <9B5CB0AF-530F-4647-8BF3-26C465A89E9E@unc.edu> Message-ID: <8D83460F-AB43-4A5F-B11A-89001B9C3464@unc.edu> If you clicked on http://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/158344 when I had posted earlier today and got an error, it is supposed to be published and available now. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 ?On 3/19/19, 10:39 AM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Calloway, Chris" wrote: This link for this job posting has changed to: http://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/158344 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 On 3/14/19, 1:32 PM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Calloway, Chris" wrote: I was just alerted by my manager that the requirement for a PhD in the listing is erroneous and it hopefully being fixed by HR. The listing should read "Masters (preferred) or Bachelor?s in computer science or related field. Amount and type of experience may be a viable substitute for specific degree field listed." -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 On 3/14/19, 10:56 AM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Calloway, Chris" wrote: Come work with me: https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/157550 -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 _______________________________________________ TriZPUG mailing list TriZPUG at python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug http://tripython.org is the Triangle Python Users Group _______________________________________________ TriZPUG mailing list TriZPUG at python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/trizpug http://tripython.org is the Triangle Python Users Group From cbc at unc.edu Mon Mar 25 09:58:42 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2019 13:58:42 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Reminder: TriPython March 2019 Meeting: Pytest Part 2: Making the most of Fixtures Message-ID: Tim Hopper will give us part 2 of PyTest on Thursday at Caktus. See you there. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 ?On 3/11/19, 4:18 PM, "TriZPUG on behalf of Calloway, Chris" wrote: Tim Hopper is going to school us again about PyTest, this time about PyTest Fixtures, which he introduced in his January TriPython talk. http://tripython.org/Members/cbc/mar-19-mtg/ When: Thursday, March 28, 7pm Where: Caktus Group, 108 Morris St., Durham What: Tim Hopper (https://tdhopper.com/) will present part two (part one was in January) of his talk on PyTest(https://pytest.org/). Tim says, "The Pytest testing framework provides a powerful, but sometimes confusing, model for defining test fixtures for reliable, repeatable execution of tests. I will discuss dependency injection-based fixtures, the benefits of the pytest fixture model, fixture nesting and parameterization, and using the built-in fixtures." Tim Hopper is a senior data scientist at Cylance (https://www.cylance.com) where he works on machine learning approaches to malware detection. Prior to Cylance, he worked in blocking malicious automated web traffic and developing a Python library for nonparametric Latent Dirichlet Allocation (https://tdhopper.com/blog/understanding-probabilistic-topic-models-by-simulation/). He has a masters degree in operations research from North Carolina State University. He lives in Raleigh with his wife and energetic 1 year old. Extemporaneous "lightning talks" of 5-10 minute duration are also welcome and don't need to be pre-announced. Lightning talks are for you to "show and tell" something you've learned about Python recently, no matter how small. We all use Python, therefore, we are always learning something new about Python that we can tell others. Park in the municipal deck on the other side of the Arts Council across W. Morgan St. The after-meeting will be around the corner at Bull McCabe's Irish Pub. Come join us for a fun and informative evening. -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 From cbc at unc.edu Fri Mar 29 09:35:35 2019 From: cbc at unc.edu (Calloway, Chris) Date: Fri, 29 Mar 2019 13:35:35 +0000 Subject: [TriPython] Full stack developer opening at RTI Message-ID: Hi: Can you post a job requisition for us? It's for a full-stack web developer in the Center for Data Science at RTI. THanks! http://m.rfer.us/RTInZa4ga Gayle S. Bieler, M.S. Director | Center for Data Science Division for Statistics and Data Science RTI International Office: 919-597-5131 (x25131) Cell: 919-740-2493 email: gbmac at rti.org website: www.rti.org/datascience -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 -------------- next part -------------- Hi: Can you post a job requisition for us? It's for a full-stack web developer in the Center for Data Science at RTI. THanks! [1]http://m.rfer.us/RTInZa4ga Gayle S. Bieler, M.S. Director | Center for Data Science Division for Statistics and Data Science RTI International Office: 919-597-5131 (x25131) Cell: 919-740-2493 email: [2]gbmac at rti.org website: www.rti.org/datascience -- Sincerely, Chris Calloway Applications Analyst University of North Carolina Renaissance Computing Institute (919) 599-3530 References Visible links 1. http://m.rfer.us/RTInZa4ga 2. mailto:gbmac at rti.org