Archives for July 2010


Linkage: education and tech

Urgh, I've been desperately trying to get back on top of my inbox since studying for the exam. I think this week-end I might win the fight!

In the meantime, 2 interesting links on education & technology:

  • Brian talks about Irish schools and ICT. This gives an interesting view of the current Irish school system, and there's a tiny mention of open-source too! Looking forward to further posts on the group's progress.
  • Linux Journal gives a review of how Scratch works (found via LWN). If you haven't had time to check out the program yourself (available on all main platforms) this is a good description of how the program enables young kids to lean programming and build cool programs and animations using drag-and-drop blocks. Would love to introduce some kids to this!
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5 questions for GUADEC participants

From the GUADEC blog:

1) Who are you and what do you do?

I'm a software developer from Dublin, Ireland. Passionate about open-source and education.

2) How did you get into GNOME?

Gnome has been the default desktop for most distro I've used. After a while I decided to see if I could help out with something, and found some bugs tagged with gnome-love that I could actually solve, yay! I haven't done much since then though, besides being a happy Gnome-tee-shirt-wearing user.

3) Why are you coming to GUADEC?

I'm hoping to learn more about Gnome, meet some of the awesome people behind the project(s), and build up the confidence to become a stronger contributor myself.

4) In 1 sentence, describe what your most favorite recent GNOME project has been. (Doesn't have to be yours!)

Gnome-terminal. I use it constantly, got my first Gnome patch accepted into that project and seem to stumble upon it all the time (e.g. finding the related gnome-terminal patch on the same site I was using to learn about control sequences.)

...Going over my one sentence, Empathy/Telepathy are pretty cool too. And I'm having a jolly good time learning pyGTK as well!

5) Will this be your first time visiting the Netherlands?

Yes! I didn't leave much buffer time around the conference for tourism though.

 GUADEC participant logo

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More education links
  • An interesting project is brewing up in Camara to provide IT Support for Irish schools. I'm keenly looking forward to the first meetup to hear more about it.

Currently learning and messing around with pyGTK. Pretty cool stuff! :)

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PyCon is on tomorrow!

PyCon Ireland begins tomorrow! There might be a few tickets left to be bought at the door, if you haven't gone one yet. I am looking forward to it immensely, and should probably head to bed soon if I want to make it in time for the early start :)

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PyCon Ireland 2010

What an awesome, awesome conference this has been.

Saturday

Many interesting talks and presentations on Saturday, mostly on different aspects of web development (saw 2 on measuring and improving UI performance), one on Clojure (I'm glad I know more about it though I still don't feel interested enough to want to give it a go yet) (Scheme is higher on the list!), a dynamic introduction to writing your own XMPP bot. There's a few talks like the Python puzzlers I want to catch on video when they're available. I saw lots of people with N900 around and oh, how I lust.

The venue could have used some air conditioning but besides that it was great, especially in the afternoon once there was more talks going on at the same time, so the rooms were less likely to be filled up. The corridors were not blocked but because the space was still, let's say cosy you would often end up besides someone and just strike random nerdy conversations. I really enjoyed that and met some very interesting people.

The evening was very well organised as well. Tasty dinner in the Radisson then live music, way too loud like Irish people tend to like (?), but after moving away a tiny bit further with a couple of attendees I met at the bar  we were able to talk about Tog and other topics. Lots of people asked me about the hackerspace over the week-end actually (I was proudly wearing my Tog tee-shirt on Saturday!), it's great to see people so curious and inspired by the idea.

And oh, the swag. Yay! Tee-shirts my size!

Sunday

I'd never been to a Python sprint before so I wasn't sure at all how it organises / self-organises. I felt very inspired by the XMPP talk from the day before (such simplicity, and yet, such power!) and I wanted to give a go at the sample bot the speaker, Victor Hugo, had published on GitHub before the talk. So I ended up with my name on a whiteboard besides XMPP, heh heh. At the beginning of the day one of the organisers asked us what we wanted to "lead a session on" and put the names, topics and rooms on a whiteboard. People were free to add up other topics as the day went along, or drop by on a session they were interested in.

Overall this felt like one of Tog's synchronous hackathon except more organised. I was delighted when someone showed up a bit later who was curious about XMPP too and sat besides me so we could work at figuring it out together. Having the speaker sitting nearby was handy too to answer questions on some aspects of XMPP communication through Python. After having the basic code running I decided to try to scrap my favourite dictionary website, wordreference.com to get basic English to French / French to English word translation. It took me longer to remember how to work with BeautifulSoup than adding the XMPP command but still, it works and was good fun. (The code is here!)

After the tasty lunch at Boticelli, I went to the "Python: building community" session, which touched on topics  like enabling newcomers to join the community and feel welcome, how the existence of a Python certification would help increase Python visibility and credibility with employers, and then one of my favourite topics, outreach to students and younger people. I got a lot of energy out of that last part and I'm motivated to set up my "introduction to programming using Python" workshop/course that has been postponed since June. More on that on this blog soon. We talked about organising quarterly events such as sprints, particularly aiming to involve university students which should be great fun too.


I'm delighted with my (quite exhausting!) week-end, and very thankful to the conference organisers for enabling us to have such an awesome time. Very energising, or as I should be saying: it was great craic.

(Updated Sept 2011 to fix broken links... Come to PyCon Ireland 2011 :))

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Curious about git?

Curious about git (http://git-scm.com)? Drop by Tog on Sunday at 11am. I've been demoing the basics informally, we'll probably be looking at collaboration this Sunday. Very informal chat, though feel free to let me know if you intend on stopping by.

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Ready for GUADEC

I will be flying to Amsterdam tomorrow. Bag's ready, only need to select 1 or 2 books that are both interesting and light. If everything goes according to plan flight-wise I'll be able to attend the Gnome Women dinner tomorrow night, which should be good fun and a great way to start meeting Gnome people!

I'm looking forward to talks targeting new Gnome contributors, like "5 things every Gnome hacker should know". I'd also like to learn more on Telepathy -- "Gnome 3: the Telepathic Desktop" looks like it should be interesting -- and I want to attend a few other talks about Gnome 3 to reassure myself about the future of Gnome and what the roadmap looks like post 3.0 release. I can never quite make up my mind between coolness and worries, whenever I think about it.

Looking forward to it all!

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Random thoughts about the Netherlands and GUADEC From the airport

Lots, lots, lots of bicycles. After 5 days I still haven't totally grokked the explicit and implicit rules of where to walk to avoid being run over by a bike. But I survived!

At GUADEC, when someone asks you "what do you do?" they mean in Gnome. I met very few people that weren't paid to work on Gnome in some way or shape. I introduced myself as "a happy user" (I am!) which seemed to delight some people. I got a couple of "good bye, happy user!" as I was leaving the hotel lobby at an(other) unofficial after-party yesterday, that was quite funny. Probably from people who couldn't remember my name as I wasn't wearing my badge anymore ;)

I've learnt many things and met a ton of very cool people over the last few days, although tonight my mind is kinda blank. Information and people overload, between the conference all day long followed by parties every night, GUADEC gets kinda intense. I'm delighted and plotting whether I'll be able to go next year. Someone offered to mentor/help me out with getting involved with some Gnome-love bugs. There'll be a HackFest in Berlin in December. I'm looking forward to following up with many of the people I've befriended over the last few days, after I sleep some!

Lots of people don't seem to know Moo cards and loved my MiniCards, sometimes asking me if they could please get one while I was handing it to someone else. If you got here from the link on my card now you know where to get MiniCards of your own :)

My worries about Gnome 3 have been lessened some. I don't know if it's attending so many talks by passionate hard-working people, or something they put in the water at GUADEC that makes me come back feeling very positive and confident about Gnome 3. March 2011!

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