Hi Michael, I am doing something at PyArkansas. I was asked to present an intermediate level view of existing tools and conventions. PyAR seems to have a heavy Twisted influence, not sure why, but I wanted to show alternatives. Do you have a simple Kamaelia example to be used with 2.6, that makes use of multiprocessing, for interprocess communication? It could be something as simple as the backplane chat example. But I want to be able to distribute it on people's laptops.
if you could give me some non-HTTP base snippets/ideas, I would appreciate that! I won't have a huge amount of time to focus on concurrency tools, but I do want to mention Kamaelia, and show something small and very useful, not tied to PyGame or vorbis (so that people can install it easily), not HTTP based (so people don't mistake it for yet another web server). Thanks once again, Gloria On Sep 21, 4:10 am, Michael Sparks <[email protected]> wrote: > For those that are able to go. I'd like to, but can't. (I looked at the costs, > and I just can't justify it) If anyone happens to be in the US and near it, > more than willing to help out with any materials etc. > > Michael. > ---------- Forwarded Message ---------- > > Subject: Re: Reminder: PyCon talk proposals due in 2 weeks > > PyCon proposal deadline is Oct. 1. Ten days! > > PyCon 2010, Atlanta, GA, USA > core conference days Feb. 19-21http://us.pycon.org/2010/conference/proposals/ > > Remember, the Call for Proposals is a diversity issue. Giving a talk > at PyCon is one of the many ways new people can take places of > prominence in the Python community. This is a concrete measure we can > take, now. Please do this: > > 1. Consider proposing a talk yourself. > 2. Pass the notice along. > 3. Is there anyone you should personally encourage to propose a talk? > Rack your brains; give them a nudge; call on some of us to help do the > nudging, if you like. > > Many people - for gender reasons, culture reasons, or whatever - may > hesitate to put themselves forward to speak. They may need a push > from you to get over misplaced modesty, shyness, an "impostor > syndrome" feeling, or just nervousness. Some may (falsely) believe > that PyCon will come asking them. > > (PyCon does specifically invite a handful of speakers each year, > chosen from among a few of the conference's favorite many-time veteran > speakers - a tiny fraction of those who end up giving talks. Overall, > though, PyCon realizes it's not nearly smart enough to find the people > who should speak, so we let them come to us.) > > PyCon always gets a fine crop of talk proposals, but this year we're > working hard to spread the call for proposals far and wide, because we > want to make sure we don't fall into a rut of using the same speakers > year after year. We want to make sure the group of people giving > presentations spreads as Python itself spreads. > --http://yeoldeclue.com/bloghttp://twitter.com/kamaelianhttp://www.kamaelia.org/Home --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "kamaelia" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/kamaelia?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
