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Brief Introduction
Date of recording – May 4th, 2015
Hosts – Tobias Macey and Chris Patti
Overview – Interview with Ned Batchelder
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Interview with Ned Batchelder
Introductions
How did you get introduced to Python?
Zope
… Implemented in Python
How did you get started as the organizer for Boston Python Meetup?
History is long and varied (Why is this switching to numbers?
Started – 6 people sitting around a coffee table
5 or 6 years
Co-organizer Jessica McKeller
Built structures to help keep the community goingr
Weekend Python Workshop
People ‘adjacent’ to the male members – wives, mothers, etc.
“What comes next” from weekend workshops – became Project Night
How much of your time ends up being dedicated to the Python community?
Also maitainer of coverage.py
Active on Freenode IRC #python
20 hours a week
What are your goals for the Boston Python community?
Continue to grow
More events, different events?
chipy – Chicago UG very active – 1 on 1 mentoring program
Smaller events – 5 person events – study groups
All levels not just beginners
Computational Biologists – study genomics
Three user groups
Pyladies Boston
DJango Boston
Boston Python Meetup
What do you find to be the most important thing(s) for building a healthy community (particularly in reference to programming)?
Consistency – good to know what to expect
Pick a cadence – don’t burn out
Speakers aren’t superheroes, they’re just people. ‘Everyone has at least one talk in them’.
Value in having a blog, twitter stream – people talk back to you and by correcting your mistakes everyone benefits.
How do you keep people engaged outside of the monthly meetings?
Meetup.com – requires moderation
python.org mailing lists – unmoderated – low traffic
Need to do more in that regard
What do you like the most/least about the Python community?
Communities can improve – IRC has gotten better
Turmoil on PSF mailing list over election for directors
How do you strike a balance between sponsors and the rest of the community? Do you have policies around sponsored presentations / talks?
Tend not to do sponsored talks
Microsoft NERD – great benefit to Boston Python
Provides monthly space for the group
1 minute slots for sponsors
No sales pitches
What are the steps I can take to start my own tech community?
How can you get the word out?
Meetup.com is useful
People like free food and beer
Be predictable. Pick something sustainable
What is the State of Python, from your perspective?
No signs of slowing down
Ruby people are moving to other environments
Python people are still using Python
Python 2 to 3 conflict is unfortunate – transition could have been handled more smoothly
Python 3 ecosystem is getting much better
Next big drama – type hinting proposal
Appears to be contrary to one of the basics tenets of the language at first blush
Do you feel that Boston will ever have its own regional Python conference?
Toyed with bid to bring Pycon to Boston
Would require someone stepping up to do it
Not sure how a regional conference ‘feels’ as a local event
Try to have Boston Python be like a year long conference all year long
Huge undertaking
Picks
Tobias
Scribd
Konch
DupeGuru
Chris
The River Cafe
Pythonista
Rototo – IOS Game
Stone Brewing Arrogant Bastard
Ned
Tox
Pythonz
Spell Tower
Richard Feynman’s Cornell Lectures
Keep in Touch
Twitter: @nedbat and @bostonpython
IRC: nedbat
nedbatchelder.com
bostonpython.com