On Aug 12, 2011, at 12:23 PM, Mike Orr wrote:

On Fri, Aug 12, 2011 at 11:51 AM, Kevin LaTona <[email protected]> wrote:


What defines Python is it's lack of complier directives.

Seems like SeaPig falls into this camp I would say.

I don't understand what this means.


Sorry that was a bit of geek humor.......


Past that in this past year all I have seen is the efforts pretty much of one person.

A guy named Mike Orr.

Who has put all these meetings on and I am sure many more.

And kept the website going

And surely has been emailed to death with many questions I am sure.



Guess it's time to say Hey, Thanks Mike for ALL the things you do to keep SeaPig running.

If there are others helping you, I am sorry I missed mentioning you all here right now.





Plus now that Twitter has reduced our attention span to a vocabulary of 140
chars or less.

Web postings to the Seapig site are so 1999 and take more work than most
seem to have.

Are you suggesting a Twitter-to-jobs-page gateway? Or what do
employers want? A form to make postings more convenient?



Me personally I think a simple link to the company's website job post and a short description is plenty.

As timing is everything and it appears few really read past the first 140 chars these days.


The extra bonus of what kind of Python stack such a job uses is great in my book as it helps to tell others what folks are doing and using.

The added benefit to the entire Python Community is it tells people what kind of tools they might want to consider adding to their work bench to stay current in the marketplace.


As many know I am some what new this past year or so to the Python world.

Certainly the biggest observation I can say about the Python and it's community is it's "shy" when compared to say Ruby or Javascript.

But then again that is just my observation take it for what it's worth.


-Kevin



Reply via email to