Re: Prevalent Python/Django academic software

2008-08-21 Thread Daniel Bickett
On Aug 21, 7:39 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Cameron Laird) wrote: > I don't understand the question. YES, there are MANY > Python-based applications doing service in a variety > of academic contexts. No, there is no central index > of all such programs. Sorry if I was unclear. If there are many such

Re: Prevalent Python/Django academic software

2008-08-21 Thread Cameron Laird
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Daniel Bickett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >Is anyone working on any software at present, using django or python >in general, which serves various academic/course functions, or else >that of student-instructor arbitration? A popular example which my >university uses

Re: Prevalent Python/Django academic software

2008-08-21 Thread tobias.oleary
Blackboard and Moodle are the dominant players in the area you're talking about. If you are trying to help people out then I suggest writing more Moodle modules. If you are trying to make money good luck. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Re: Prevalent Python/Django academic software

2008-08-20 Thread James Matthews
I have sent this to the Django Mailing list so you can get it from two sources On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 9:07 PM, Daniel Bickett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Is anyone working on any software at present, using django or python > in general, which serves various academic/course functions, or else >

Prevalent Python/Django academic software

2008-08-20 Thread Daniel Bickett
Is anyone working on any software at present, using django or python in general, which serves various academic/course functions, or else that of student-instructor arbitration? A popular example which my university uses is the "Blackboard Academic Suite" (wpedia:Blackboard Inc.), which offers a wid