On Tue, 14 Dec 2004 23:48:41 +0100, Martin v. Löwis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I understand that one still needs to build libpython24.a in order to
> use this process. As I have said, I'd happily ship that file with the
> 2.4.1 MSI, unless the release manager tells me that this would an
> unaccep
Hi everyone,
I'm going to be leading a class on Python at the University of
California, Berkeley next semester (starting in January). I'm
interested in using actual bugs in Python as exercises for the class,
the goal being 1) to give the students something "real" to work with,
and 2) to (hopef
On Wed, 2004-12-15 at 07:32, Nick Coghlan wrote:
> about.python.org?
>
> And if someone ends up playing with the DNS server, maybe they could add
> wiki.python.org while they're at it :)
DNS changes have to go through pydotorg at python.org, since Thomas is
the person currently able to add host
On Tue, Dec 14, 2004, Gregory P. Smith wrote:
>Attribution deleted:
>>
>> No one disagrees that Python needs better marketing material. At the
>> last PyCon a group of people sat down in a pydotorg BoF and agreed
>> that yes, we do need a management-friendly marketing site, and that we
>> could p
Ummm... I don't think that anyone looks for information by trolling
subdomain names. If I am looking for python information, I go to
www.python.org or python.org. I would never guess "business.python.org".
Seems to me that what we need is content and let the search engines bring
on the masses.
For a subsite aimed at businesses, business.python.org is obvious and
easily remembered. Not all businesses are corporations. 'about' and 'why'
are not specific at all.
I think such a subsite, linked from the main site also, would be a good
idea. It should explain both why (including success
A.M. Kuchling wrote:
On Sun, Dec 12, 2004 at 03:32:03PM -0200, Carlos Ribeiro wrote:
Of course, the point here is not Perl-bashing. The point here is that
we should be able to "sell" Python better than we do now, even without
the need to resort to such poor measures. I'm sure the Python
community d
On Tue, Dec 14, 2004 at 10:21:58PM -0800, Gregory P. Smith wrote:
> suggested hostname: why.python.org
It's only a matter of taste, probably, but that looks a bit ugly for
my eyes. May be use.python.org? corp.python.org?
Oleg.
--
Oleg Broytmannhttp://phd.pp.ru/[EM
Oleg Broytmann wrote:
On Tue, Dec 14, 2004 at 10:21:58PM -0800, Gregory P. Smith wrote:
suggested hostname: why.python.org
It's only a matter of taste, probably, but that looks a bit ugly for
my eyes. May be use.python.org? corp.python.org?
about.python.org?
And if someone ends up playing with
"Randy Chung" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hi everyone,
>
> I'm going to be leading a class on Python at the University of
> California, Berkeley next semester (starting in January).
Great.
> I'm interested in using actual bugs in Python as exercises
Please
Paul Moore wrote:
For a starter, what steps do you actually take to build a release? I
assume that the first step is to build Python, by clicking on "build"
in VS.NET.
Yes. You can skip this step by just putting all the .pyds, dlls, and
.exes into the PCbuild directory. The packaging will try to p
Terry Reedy wrote:
"Randy Chung" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[SNIP]
I'm interested in using actual bugs in Python as exercises
Please consider including review of existing patches. Besides being
useful, it will also teach students how to submit good patches of t
On Wed, 15 Dec 2004, Aahz wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 14, 2004, Gregory P. Smith wrote:
> >Attribution deleted:
> >>
> >> No one disagrees that Python needs better marketing material. At the
> >> last PyCon a group of people sat down in a pydotorg BoF and agreed
> >> that yes, we do need a management-fr
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