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The Melbourne Python Users Group currently meets on the 3rd Thursday of each month at Intrepid Travel in Fitzroy. New members and presenters are always welcome.

The main culprit is [mailto:anthony.briggs@gmail.com Anthony Briggs], along with a number of high caliber/hard core pythonistas. We also have a [http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/melbourne-pug mailing list].
{{http://mt0.google.com/vt/data=AR9JqtH-IZKqak0MrVEBloQf2uqmo-gnn7jgkXD4bYR_abtLFF_ClS8i_6mS95YD1CEiRE5JSxiHLaWmgRAsNKJJs9nva63KU0aHet4|map to the meeting|align="right"}}

The [[http://www.hotelsandaccommodation.com.au/victoria/melbourne/|Melbourne]] Python Users Group is currently mostly active via its [[http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/melbourne-pug|mailing list]]. Newcomers are always welcome; we're a friendly bunch :)

A Facebook group has also been set up to facilitate interactions between MPUGgers, should they prefer that medium. (http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=59918958226)

The main culprits are [[mailto:r1chardj0n3s@gmail.com|Richard Jones]], [[mailto:tleeuwenburg@gmail.com|Tennessee Leeuwenburg]] and [[mailto:ed@pythoncharmers.com|Ed Schofield]], along with a number of other Pythoneers.

Short URL: http://j.mp/mpug (or http://bit.ly/mpug - n.b. not 'MPUG')

We've also got a [[http://mechanicalcat.net/images/MPUG-flyer.pdf|PDF flyer]] that you can post on message boards.
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The next meeting is on August the 18th at 6.30pm, and we'll have two presentations - one on test driven development by Bruce Cropley and another from Richard Jones on pygame.

'''Intrepid Travel''' [[BR]]
12 Spring St, [[BR]]
Fitzroy [[BR]]
16th June, 6.30pm [[BR]]

[http://www.whereis.com/whereis/mapping/geocodeAddress.do?advertiserId=&streetNumber=12&streetName=Spring+st&poiType=&suburb=fitzroy&state=Victoria&x=39&y=11 Map to Intrepid Travel]

It's pretty close to the 96 and 112 tram, and only a short hop from
Parliament station. Not too sure about parking, but there's a fair bit
of street parking around, particularly after hours. There are also a
large number of cafes and restaurants along Brunswick street.

The meeting format is largely ad-hoc, and we're willing to experiment with different ideas, such as lightning presentations, announcements, demos or code/design reviews. If you have an idea, drop Anthony an email or bring it up for discussion, either on the list or at the meeting.
Meetings are hosted by [[http://www.inspire9.com.au|Inspire9]] at 1/41 Stewart Street in Richmond.

Map: http://g.co/maps/9jtw9

Calendar: [[http://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=9fa182ujn964o858b2dgil28n0%40group.calendar.google.com&ctz=Australia/Sydney|HTML]], [[http://www.google.com/calendar/ical/9fa182ujn964o858b2dgil28n0%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.ics|iCal]]

There's a meetup.com group to track numbers etc. Please join up and add yourself to the group! We'll keep you posted with announcements about the meetings. http://www.meetup.com/Melbourne-Python-Meetup-Group/
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|| Meeting Date || Topic || Presenter || Presentation File ||
|| June 16th, 2005 || Automation with Python || Anthony Briggs || [http://members.westnet.com.au/abriggs/melbournepug/autocodeblack.sxi Autocode] ||
|| July 21st, 2005 || Using Twisted for BEEPy || Justin Warren || [http://members.westnet.com.au/abriggs/melbournepug/twisted-melbourne-pug-v0.1.sxi Twisted] ||
|| August 18th, 2005 || TDD with Python || Bruce Cropley || ||
|| || Pygame || Richard Jones || ||
|| September 15th, 2005 || No presentation yet || Your name could be here! || ||
|| October 20th, 2005 || || || ||
|| November 17th, 2005 || || || ||
|| December 15th, 2005 || || || ||
We meet on the first Monday of every month starting at 6pm.

'''Monday 5th December'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * parse() - Richard Jones

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Using AI and Python to do badly in competition rock-paper-scissors (and other cool things)


=== Potential Topics ===

If you're not sure on a topic, or don't want to give a presentation,
perhaps you could give us an idea of topics or areas that you would like
to hear about - that way we can encourage people who have that particular
area of expertise, but who might be wavering. Some topics that have been suggested are:

 * Django
 * PIL
 * pygame
 * pyopengl
 * zope
 * pypi
 * distutils
 * wxPython
 * Twisted
 * web/CGI
 * Databases
 * Unit Testing
 * Patterns
 * web2py

If you feel qualified to give a talk/presentation on any of these, let me know and I'll schedule you in for a timeslot. Or just edit the wiki directly - that's what it's all about, after all :)

=== Previous Topics ===

'''Monday 7th November'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * Mike Dewhirst "[[http://www.climate.com.au/downloads/project_sweat.pdf|Back of the envelope entrepreneuring. Sweat-equity.]]"

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Daehyok Shin - Python-based streamflow forecasting system at the BoM
 * Tennessee Leeuwenburg "Using Python and AI to do poorly in the Rock Paper Scissors competition"
 * Ed Schofield - cool developments in IPython

'''Monday 3rd October'''

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Noon Silk - Python in LaTeX
 * PyPI availability and mirroring - Richard Jones

'''Monday 5th September'''

'''15 minute talks'''

 * someone talked about Jenkins
 * Richard talked about PyWeek

'''Monday 1st August'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * the awesome PyCon AU schedule!
 * Graeme Cross: 5 useful resources for Python beginners (my PyCon AU lightning talk)

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Richard Jones: web micro framework battle preview (probably more like 30 minutes)

'''Monday 4th July'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * none

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Ryan Kelly: supervisord and django-supervisor
 * Ed Schofield: Lessons from PyCon APAC in Singapore (June)


'''Monday 6th June'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * Richard Jones: overload!

'''20 minute talks'''

 * Javier Candeira: Driving Gimp with Python: The Good, the Bad and the Beautiful


'''Monday 2nd May'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * Richard Jones: Porting to Python 3
 * Ryan Kelly: Django on DotCloud - from zero to deployed in five minutes

'''20 minute talks'''

 * Alec Clews: Introduction to Programming with Python.

I'd like to quickly shoot through an outline presentation/workshop I am giving at Linux Users Victoria Beginner's Workshop later in May, I am not a Python programmer but I'm presenting a 2-3 hour workshop for programming neophytes and currently I think Python is the language of choice.

Looking for feedback and suggestions on my approach.


'''Monday 4th April'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * Richard Jones: PyWeek number 12!

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Ryan Kelly: tnetstring, an experimental alternative to JSON

So, I started writing a benchmarking package... (Tennessee)
 * It uses decorators. Just @benchmark your unit tests
 * And I figured out how to make it installable (it wasn't hard)
 * And started hacking on a reporting/graphing module (still under development)
 * But it's probably rubbish, so I can take feedback


'''Monday 7th March'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * Pat Sunter: Introduction to PDF generation with ReportLab
 * Ed Schofield: Python coding sprint (tentatively scheduled for Saturday 16 April)

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Tony Forster: OLPC / Sugar. Sugar is the GUI of the One Laptop Per Child, wiki.sugarlabs.org it is largely written in Python
 * Richard Jones: what's new in Python 3.2
 * Graeme Cross: an introduction to decorators


'''Monday 31st January'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * python me
 * Ryan Kelly: dexml, a dead-simple object-xml mapper

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Ed Schofield: An introduction to IPython

'''Monday 6th December'''


'''5 minute talks'''

 * Ed Schofield: Teaching Python

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Richard Jones: A Somewhat Rambling Talk About The Aweseomness Of Cython



'''Friday 5th November'''

'''5 minute talks'''

 * Rory Hart: Using Fabric for deployment and server management
 * Graeme Cross: Python/C++ integration with [[http://pythonqt.sourceforge.net/|PythonQt]]
 * Rasjid Wilcox: Frosted Python
 * Ed Schofield: How to promote Python
 * Anthony Briggs: Writing [[http://manning.com/briggs/|Hello Python!]]

'''Monday the 10th of May'''

'''15 minute talks'''

 * using fabric/pip/virtualenv bootstrapping and deploying environments (Rory Hart)

'''5 minute talks'''

 * Load-balancing xmlrpclib/jsonrpclib for robust distributed applications (Andreux Fort)
 * using coverage.py in unit testing (Rory Hart)

'''Monday the 12th of April'''

'''15 minute talks'''

 * Scientific computing with NumPy / SciPy / Matplotlib (Ed Schofield)

'''5 minute talks'''

 * filemov.py - a tool for relocating old files (Mike Dewhirst)

Source code including unit tests, (aged) test files and py2exe setup.py are at http://svn.pczen.com.au/repos/pysrc/gpl3/filemov - userid = public (no password). Drop me a line if you can contribute improvements and would like write access to the repo. Performance needs attention!

'''Monday the 1st of March'''

'''15 minute talks'''

 * PyWeek - the why and the how (Richard Jones)

'''Monday the 1st of February'''

 * IronPython / Silverlight by Tarn; [[http://blog.sharpthinking.com.au/post/2010/01/25/Python-SilverlightMoonlight-2-Xapping.aspx|more info]] and [[http://markdown-madness.appspot.com/silverlight-pygments|pygments syntax highlighting example]]
 * [[http://pypi.python.org/pypi/withrestart/|withrestart]] by Ryan (slides here: [[attachment:withrestart.pdf]])

'''Tuesday the 8th of December'''

 * "promise" by Ryan Kelly (slides here: [[attachment:promise.odp]])
 * Mozilla Raindrop and/or CouchDB by Mark Hammond

'''Tuesday the 10th of November'''

No talks.


'''Tuesday the 13th of October'''

 * [[http://pypi.python.org/pypi/html|HTML generation in code made way nicer]] (Richard Jones)
 * Accelerate your Pylons development with [[http://pypi.python.org/pypi/BlastOff|BlastOff]] (Chris Miles)
 * A whirlwind tour of [[http://code.google.com/p/pyfilesystem/|FS]] and [[http://pypi.python.org/pypi/filelike/|filelike]] (Ryan Kelly, slides here: [[attachment:fs_and_filelike.tar.gz]])


'''Tuesday the 8th of September'''

 * Mike Dewhirst reviewing Pro Django
 * Richard Jones by request doing a short intro to context managers
 * Richard Jones isn't a lumberjack, but someone cool is...


'''Tuesday the 11th of August'''

 * Martin Schweitzer "Primetime Wordfinding"... It's a rather novel algorithm that I (re)discovered(?)* for finding word matches when given a group of letters (eg. think of the puzzle in the age where you have a grid with 9 letters and have to find words). I then noticed that it had applications to other fields such as bioinformatics (which I won't go into in the talk [unless, of course, there is a particular interest]). It also has a very nice representation in Python - which I will mention.
 * Richard Jones ... a new cool thing I'm working on
 * Chris Miles "Intro to [[http://www.psychofx.com/psi/|PSI]] (Python System Information)"

----
CategoryUsergroups

The Melbourne Python Users Group

map to the meeting

The Melbourne Python Users Group is currently mostly active via its mailing list. Newcomers are always welcome; we're a friendly bunch :)

A Facebook group has also been set up to facilitate interactions between MPUGgers, should they prefer that medium. (http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=59918958226)

The main culprits are Richard Jones, Tennessee Leeuwenburg and Ed Schofield, along with a number of other Pythoneers.

Short URL: http://j.mp/mpug (or http://bit.ly/mpug - n.b. not 'MPUG')

We've also got a PDF flyer that you can post on message boards.

Meeting Details, Location, etc.

Meetings are hosted by Inspire9 at 1/41 Stewart Street in Richmond.

Map: http://g.co/maps/9jtw9

Calendar: HTML, iCal

There's a meetup.com group to track numbers etc. Please join up and add yourself to the group! We'll keep you posted with announcements about the meetings. http://www.meetup.com/Melbourne-Python-Meetup-Group/

Schedule

We meet on the first Monday of every month starting at 6pm.

Monday 5th December

5 minute talks

  • parse() - Richard Jones

15 minute talks

  • Using AI and Python to do badly in competition rock-paper-scissors (and other cool things)

Potential Topics

If you're not sure on a topic, or don't want to give a presentation, perhaps you could give us an idea of topics or areas that you would like to hear about - that way we can encourage people who have that particular area of expertise, but who might be wavering. Some topics that have been suggested are:

  • Django
  • PIL
  • pygame
  • pyopengl
  • zope
  • pypi
  • distutils
  • wxPython
  • Twisted
  • web/CGI
  • Databases
  • Unit Testing
  • Patterns
  • web2py

If you feel qualified to give a talk/presentation on any of these, let me know and I'll schedule you in for a timeslot. Or just edit the wiki directly - that's what it's all about, after all :)

Previous Topics

Monday 7th November

5 minute talks

15 minute talks

  • Daehyok Shin - Python-based streamflow forecasting system at the BoM
  • Tennessee Leeuwenburg "Using Python and AI to do poorly in the Rock Paper Scissors competition"
  • Ed Schofield - cool developments in IPython

Monday 3rd October

15 minute talks

  • Noon Silk - Python in LaTeX
  • PyPI availability and mirroring - Richard Jones

Monday 5th September

15 minute talks

  • someone talked about Jenkins
  • Richard talked about PyWeek

Monday 1st August

5 minute talks

  • the awesome PyCon AU schedule!

  • Graeme Cross: 5 useful resources for Python beginners (my PyCon AU lightning talk)

15 minute talks

  • Richard Jones: web micro framework battle preview (probably more like 30 minutes)

Monday 4th July

5 minute talks

  • none

15 minute talks

  • Ryan Kelly: supervisord and django-supervisor
  • Ed Schofield: Lessons from PyCon APAC in Singapore (June)

Monday 6th June

5 minute talks

  • Richard Jones: overload!

20 minute talks

  • Javier Candeira: Driving Gimp with Python: The Good, the Bad and the Beautiful

Monday 2nd May

5 minute talks

  • Richard Jones: Porting to Python 3
  • Ryan Kelly: Django on DotCloud - from zero to deployed in five minutes

20 minute talks

  • Alec Clews: Introduction to Programming with Python.

I'd like to quickly shoot through an outline presentation/workshop I am giving at Linux Users Victoria Beginner's Workshop later in May, I am not a Python programmer but I'm presenting a 2-3 hour workshop for programming neophytes and currently I think Python is the language of choice.

Looking for feedback and suggestions on my approach.

Monday 4th April

5 minute talks

  • Richard Jones: PyWeek number 12!

15 minute talks

  • Ryan Kelly: tnetstring, an experimental alternative to JSON

So, I started writing a benchmarking package... (Tennessee)

  • It uses decorators. Just @benchmark your unit tests
  • And I figured out how to make it installable (it wasn't hard)
  • And started hacking on a reporting/graphing module (still under development)
  • But it's probably rubbish, so I can take feedback

Monday 7th March

5 minute talks

  • Pat Sunter: Introduction to PDF generation with ReportLab

  • Ed Schofield: Python coding sprint (tentatively scheduled for Saturday 16 April)

15 minute talks

  • Tony Forster: OLPC / Sugar. Sugar is the GUI of the One Laptop Per Child, wiki.sugarlabs.org it is largely written in Python
  • Richard Jones: what's new in Python 3.2
  • Graeme Cross: an introduction to decorators

Monday 31st January

5 minute talks

  • python me
  • Ryan Kelly: dexml, a dead-simple object-xml mapper

15 minute talks

  • Ed Schofield: An introduction to IPython

Monday 6th December

5 minute talks

  • Ed Schofield: Teaching Python

15 minute talks

  • Richard Jones: A Somewhat Rambling Talk About The Aweseomness Of Cython

Friday 5th November

5 minute talks

  • Rory Hart: Using Fabric for deployment and server management
  • Graeme Cross: Python/C++ integration with PythonQt

  • Rasjid Wilcox: Frosted Python
  • Ed Schofield: How to promote Python
  • Anthony Briggs: Writing Hello Python!

Monday the 10th of May

15 minute talks

  • using fabric/pip/virtualenv bootstrapping and deploying environments (Rory Hart)

5 minute talks

  • Load-balancing xmlrpclib/jsonrpclib for robust distributed applications (Andreux Fort)
  • using coverage.py in unit testing (Rory Hart)

Monday the 12th of April

15 minute talks

  • Scientific computing with NumPy / SciPy / Matplotlib (Ed Schofield)

5 minute talks

  • filemov.py - a tool for relocating old files (Mike Dewhirst)

Source code including unit tests, (aged) test files and py2exe setup.py are at http://svn.pczen.com.au/repos/pysrc/gpl3/filemov - userid = public (no password). Drop me a line if you can contribute improvements and would like write access to the repo. Performance needs attention!

Monday the 1st of March

15 minute talks

  • PyWeek - the why and the how (Richard Jones)

Monday the 1st of February

Tuesday the 8th of December

  • "promise" by Ryan Kelly (slides here: promise.odp)

  • Mozilla Raindrop and/or CouchDB by Mark Hammond

Tuesday the 10th of November

No talks.

Tuesday the 13th of October

Tuesday the 8th of September

  • Mike Dewhirst reviewing Pro Django
  • Richard Jones by request doing a short intro to context managers
  • Richard Jones isn't a lumberjack, but someone cool is...

Tuesday the 11th of August

  • Martin Schweitzer "Primetime Wordfinding"... It's a rather novel algorithm that I (re)discovered(?)* for finding word matches when given a group of letters (eg. think of the puzzle in the age where you have a grid with 9 letters and have to find words). I then noticed that it had applications to other fields such as bioinformatics (which I won't go into in the talk [unless, of course, there is a particular interest]). It also has a very nice representation in Python - which I will mention.
  • Richard Jones ... a new cool thing I'm working on
  • Chris Miles "Intro to PSI (Python System Information)"


CategoryUsergroups

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