Differences between revisions 45 and 46
Revision 45 as of 2009-12-09 00:07:15
Size: 3744
Editor: ppp118-209-62-246
Comment:
Revision 46 as of 2009-12-28 21:41:00
Size: 3795
Editor: c122-107-171-50
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 13: Line 13:
Meetings are held at [[http://www.robotsushi.com/|Robot Sushi and Bar]], 12 Bligh Place, Melbourne. Meetings are held at [[http://horsebazaar.com.au/|Horse Bazaar]], 397 Little Lonsdale St, Melbourne.
Line 15: Line 15:
http://tinyurl.com/ybtzlgg <-- Google Map http://bit.ly/8vR2Kw <-- Google Map
Line 20: Line 20:
We meet on the second Tuesday of every month starting at 6:30pm. In 2010 we'll be moving to the first Monday of every month, still starting at 6:30pm. The schedule is available as a Google [[http://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=9fa182ujn964o858b2dgil28n0%40group.calendar.google.com&ctz=Australia/Sydney|calendar]] ([[http://www.google.com/calendar/ical/9fa182ujn964o858b2dgil28n0%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.ics|iCal]]). We meet on the first Monday of every month starting at 6:30pm. The schedule is available as a Google [[http://www.google.com/calendar/embed?src=9fa182ujn964o858b2dgil28n0%40group.calendar.google.com&ctz=Australia/Sydney|calendar]] ([[http://www.google.com/calendar/ical/9fa182ujn964o858b2dgil28n0%40group.calendar.google.com/public/basic.ics|iCal]]).
Line 22: Line 22:
'''Tuesday the 8th of December''' '''Monday the 1st of February'''
Line 25: Line 25:
 * "promise" by Ryan Kelly (slides here: [[attachment:promise.odp]])
 * Mozilla Raindrop and/or CouchDB by Mark Hammond
Line 55: Line 53:

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

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

''5 minute lightning talks''

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

No talks.

The Melbourne Python Users Group

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 and Tennessee Leeuwenburg, along with a number of other Pythoneers.

Bitly URL: http://bit.ly/mpug (n.b. not 'MPUG')

Meeting Details, Location, etc.

Meetings are held at Horse Bazaar, 397 Little Lonsdale St, Melbourne.

http://bit.ly/8vR2Kw <-- Google Map

Schedule

We meet on the first Monday of every month starting at 6:30pm. The schedule is available as a Google calendar (iCal).

Monday the 1st of February

15 minute talks

5 minute lightning talks

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:

  • 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

Tuesday the 8th of December

15 minute talks

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

  • Mozilla Raindrop and/or CouchDB by Mark Hammond

5 minute lightning talks

Tuesday the 10th of November

No talks.

Tuesday the 13th of October

15 minute talks

5 minute lightning talks

Tuesday the 8th of September

15 minute talks

  • Mike Dewhirst reviewing Pro Django
  • Richard Jones by request doing a short intro to context managers

5 minute lightning talks

  • Richard Jones isn't a lumberjack, but someone cool is...

Tuesday the 11th of August

15 minute talks

  • 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

5 minute lightning talks

  • Chris Miles "Intro to PSI (Python System Information)"


CategoryUsergroups

MelbournePUG (last edited 2020-03-01 23:54:30 by Ed Schofield)

Unable to edit the page? See the FrontPage for instructions.