They did tape and record the talk with fairly decent audio and video 
equipment.  It takes them a bit to edit all of the video after the 
conference, but then it is available to the public (not sure if a fee is 
involved). I'll ask an organizer for details.
What was cool about it was that I told everyone: I am excellent in 
Python, not an super-exert in Kamaelia, and we are still going to do 
useful things with it here, and we did. It was really great.
Gloria
> Hi Gloria,
>
> Congratulations - thats really good to hear! And glad you're sticking
> around :-)
>
> Are any video/audio/notes/slides from your talk?
>
>
> Matt
>
>   
>> Hi all,
>> I did the Kamaelia tutorial today at PyCon. I spent a lot of time
>> walking through existing examples. I also generated epydocs from the
>> code, and showed people the great unit tests and sample code, as well as
>> comments in the code. People seemed to have the same reaction as when I
>> first saw Kamaelia. The code is almost too simple, and you feel like you
>> really don't understand what's happening until you open the hood and
>> look inside. We looked inside, then popped back out, and everyone seemed
>> to enjoy it. We also used pdb to walk through code until the run() was
>> executed, and threads were kicked off. It was really useful. I hope some
>> of the attendees join this group.
>> Thanks for all of your help. I will be using Kamaelia for my own open
>> source project, so I will still be active on the list, and asking many
>> questions, I am sure.
>> Later,
>> Gloria
>>
>>     
>
>
>   


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