DjangoCon 2008 Keynote: Cal Henderson

Cal Henderson delivers keynote address: "Why I Hate Django" www.djangocon.org

Cal Henderson delivers keynote address: "Why I Hate Django" www.djangocon.org

Guido van Rossum, creator of Python, on Django and Google App Engine. www.djangocon.org

Speaker: Malcolm Tredinnick www.djangocon.org

Moderator: Jacob Kaplan-Moss Panelists: Matt Croydon, Michael Greer, Joshua Jag Ginsberg, Leah Culver, Andy McCurdy, Jason Yan

Mark Ramm delivers keynote address: "Building a better framework - A Turbogears guy on what Django should learn from Zope."

Moderator: Michael Trier Panelists: Simon Willison, Russ Keith-Magee, Andrew Godwin www.djangocon.org

Speaker: Malcolm Tredinnick http:/www.djangocon.org

Moderator: Adrian Holovaty Panelists: Matt Waite, Maura Chace, Matt Croydon, Ben Welsh www.djangocon.org

Various speakers give short talks on Django and related topics.

Conference Chair Robert Lofthouse, Jacob Kaplan-Moss and Leslie Hawthorn welcome attendees to DjangoCon 2008. www.djangocon.org

Speakers: Chris Moffitt and Bruce Kroeze www.djangocon.org

Adrian Holovaty and Jacob Kaplan-Moss deliver keynote address "Django's Future" www.djangocon.org

Speakers: Jim Baker and Leo Soto www.djangocon.org

Moderated by Michael Trier Panelists: Jacob Kaplan-Moss, Adrian Holovaty, Simon Willison, James Bennett, Malcolm Tredinnick www.djangocon.org

Speakers: Christian Hammond & David Trowbridge www.djangocon.org

Speakers: Michael Trier & Brian Rosner www.djangocon.org

Jacob Kaplan-Moss & Adrian Holovaty answer attendee questions following their "State of Django" Keynote www.djangocon.org

The new surprising and refreshing Django based CMS. www.merengueproject.org
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With apologizes to Jonathan Coulton, this is a video of an improvised surprise act for DjangoCon.eu 2010. We managed to practice it only a couple of times which shows, but it was super fun! Big thanks to DjangoCon.eu organizers who let us do this. :)

EN ESTA OCASION UNO DE LOS MEJORES EXPONENTES DEL HIP HOP PERUANO DJANGO CON LOS "GRITONES DE LA ESCENA" MICKY JOTA Y PENDE MC...A ESCUCHAR EL TEMA QUE SERA UN EXITO EN TARIMA COMO LOS ANTERIORES- MAS MUSICA EN : www.myspace.com/djangohh www.myspace.com

Tema que del disco "El testimonio", de prodigio.1 Producido por Sv Latin Music. En unos meses saldra el videoclip oficial HD de este tema. El 18 de Diciembre será el evento de Metrika Belika (Warrior, Umano, Django) Con los mejores grupos de la escena local , prohibido faltar !!! Precio S/.10.00 (Inc. Sticker Metrika Belika, +CD)
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Google Tech Talks December 17, 2008 ABSTRACT Join one of Django's lead developers on a ride through Django's history. We'll start in Lawrence, Kansas and look at the birth of Django as a proprietary CMS, follow its progress towards the first open source release, and look at what's changed -- and what's stayed the same -- on the long road to Django 1.0. Speaker: Jacob Kaplan-Moss Jacob Kaplan-Moss is one of the lead developers of Django. At his day job, he's a software architect for Whiskey Media, one of those newfangled Web One-Point-Oh companies you've read so much about. A good deal of Jacob's work time is devoted to working on Django. Jacob previously worked for the Lawrence Journal-World, a locally-owned newspaper in Lawrence, KS where Django was developed. At the Journal-World Jacob was the lead developer of Ellington, a commercial web publishing platform for media companies.
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PyCon 2008 Talk by Anna M Ravenscroft (Stanford University) Text parsing - breaking up text into smaller parts for processing - is a common task for programmers. Whether you're tokenizing a sentence for Part of Speech tagging in computational linguistics, automatically checking logs for specific errors, or doing Hidden Markov Models to output Emily Dickinson-style poems, chances are, at some point in your programming, you'll need to do text parsing. One of the most common methods of doing text parsing uses a specialized pattern-recognition language called regular expressions. Regular expressions (REs) can be intimidating to a new programmer; they may try to avoid REs at all costs. Others will turn to REs out of unfamiliarity with the wonders of Python native string manipulation. This talk will focus on the basics: * when and how can you use Python's native string methods, * when to consider REs, and * how to do simple text parsing. Slides available at us.pycon.org