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The first such event is [http://www.python.org/pycon/ PyCon DC 2003], with a planned (but currently unannounced) conference fee of less than $200. It will be held at George Washington University's Cafritz Conference Center in Washington DC, from 26-28 March 2003. The major theme of the conference is '''''Popularizing Python''''' -- we all want to see our favorite language achieve world domination, and this will be the perfect venue to plan the coup. :-) The second annual [http://www.pycon.org/dc2004 PyCon community conference], ["PyConDC2004"], is being held 24-26 March 2004 at George Washington University's Cafritz Conference Center in Washington, DC.
This is a low-cost community-organized conference. There will be four days of sprinting on various projects before the con, from March 20 to March 23; see SprintPlan2004. So, if you've always wanted to see ExtremeProgramming in action, the PyCon sprint will be a good place to start.
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A two-day "sprint" event is planned before the conference with the intention of improving various aspects of the Python core. There is also the possibility of a further sprint immediately following the conference, and there are rumours that at least one commercial concern will be taking advantage of the presence of so many Pythonistas in the area to organize their own sprint. So, if you've always wanted to see ExtremeProgramming in action, PyCon will be a good place to start. The first such event was [http://www.pycon.org/pastevents/dc2003 PyCon DC 2003], held at George Washington University's Cafritz Conference Center in Washington DC, from 26-28 March 2003. The major theme of the conference was '''''Popularizing Python''''' and it was a great success!
A two-day "sprint" event was held before the conference with several teams working on different projects including the Python core, Twisted, Zope 3, and others.
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IPC 11, the eleventh InternationalPythonConference, will be a track at OSCON 2003, organized by O'Reilly.
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IPC 11, the eleventh InternationalPythonConference, was a track at OSCON 2003, organized by O'Reilly.

The Python conference world is changing. There seems to be a general feeling that, while there is still room for a full-blown InternationalPythonConference, the collective PythonCommunities should also broaden the audience by organizing lower-cost events.

The second annual [http://www.pycon.org/dc2004 PyCon community conference], ["PyConDC2004"], is being held 24-26 March 2004 at George Washington University's Cafritz Conference Center in Washington, DC. This is a low-cost community-organized conference. There will be four days of sprinting on various projects before the con, from March 20 to March 23; see SprintPlan2004. So, if you've always wanted to see ExtremeProgramming in action, the PyCon sprint will be a good place to start.

The first such event was [http://www.pycon.org/pastevents/dc2003 PyCon DC 2003], held at George Washington University's Cafritz Conference Center in Washington DC, from 26-28 March 2003. The major theme of the conference was Popularizing Python and it was a great success! A two-day "sprint" event was held before the conference with several teams working on different projects including the Python core, Twisted, Zope 3, and others.

IPC 11, the eleventh InternationalPythonConference, was a track at OSCON 2003, organized by O'Reilly.

PythonConferences (last edited 2024-04-17 08:14:49 by MarcAndreLemburg)

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