POPULARITY
Topics covered in this episode: content-types package for better MIME types/Content-Type Wagtail 6.4 Build It Yourself Build backend popularity over time Extras Joke Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by us! Support our work through: Our courses at Talk Python Training The Complete pytest Course Patreon Supporters Connect with the hosts Michael: @mkennedy@fosstodon.org / @mkennedy.codes (bsky) Brian: @brianokken@fosstodon.org / @brianokken.bsky.social Show: @pythonbytes@fosstodon.org / @pythonbytes.fm (bsky) Join us on YouTube at pythonbytes.fm/live to be part of the audience. Usually Monday at 10am PT. Older video versions available there too. Finally, if you want an artisanal, hand-crafted digest of every week of the show notes in email form? Add your name and email to our friends of the show list, we'll never share it. Michael #1: content-types package for better MIME types/Content-Type It started with this comment from Raf. mimetypes — Map filenames to MIME types It is oddly missing very common types and varies by platform, OS install and other factors (see this function). Search around and found python-magic. Seems great but ImportError: failed to find libmagic. Check your installation → brew install libmagic magic.from_file("testdata/test.pdf") → FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'testdata/test.pdf' hmm So I had to create my own. Introducing content-types A Python library to map file extensions to MIME types. Unlike other libraries, this one does not try to access the file or parse the bytes of the file or stream. It just looks at the extension. Better support than mimetypes builtin. Brian #2: Wagtail 6.4 Release notes Lots of great updates, but I want to zoom in on background tasks. 6.4 includes django-tasks which is an available implementation of DEP 0014: Background workers This proposal is accepted and this thread includes a great talk from DjangoCon Europe 2024 Why is this cool? Even though django-tasks says it's “under active development”, as long as you pin the version and test your behavior depending on this, it must be ready to use if wagtail is going for it. Don't you think? Michael #3: Build It Yourself from Armin Ronacher, sent in by Rafael Weingartner An excellent article pushing back on too many dependencies Maybe the advice of always prefer code reuse isn't that great after all? It's much much easier to solve small little problems these days due to AI. Take Postmark as an example. “It's time to have a new perspective: we should give kudos to engineers who write a small function themselves instead of hooking in a transitive web of crates. We should be suspicious of big crate graphs. Celebrated are the minimal dependencies, the humble function that just quietly does the job, the code that doesn't need to be touched for years because it was done right once.” - Armin Brian #4: Build backend popularity over time Bastian Venthur This is just for projects using pyproject.toml Apparently he did this last year as well, so we can see some trends. Results setuptools: ~50% (last year ~50%) poetry: ~30% (last year ~33%) hatchling: (percent not listed, but looks like 12-15%), (last year 10%) flit: ~5% (last year ~10%) other: (above flit now) Analysis: setuptools continues to grow in absolute numbers and maintain it's percentage. poetry declining hatchling growing flit declining Brian commentary This is not surprising to me. I generally use hatchling for more control, and setuptools for simple projects. I think we might end up with mostly setuptools and hatchling in a couple years. Extras Brian: Test & Code Archive is now all episodes on one page Old method was 30 episodes per page For something completely different NameGrapher - popularity of US names No wonder I don't meet a lot of kids named Brian Michael is #16 (#1 in 1950s - 1990s) Brian is #317 (#8 in 1970s) Joke: The long path to rejection.
The guys discuss why it's so important to order your wedding album in paperback, how it's not insulting to guess a woman's age if you use a 20 year window, and when it's necessary to specify what is NOT to be your eternal nickname before you die in a hole.
Willy meets the Wind and they become friends.
A book of stories about the beloved Willy Wagtail bird.
Hello everybody, Brian here from quantlabs.net. Today is May 23rd. I just wanted to go over two podcasts I'm putting out today. I haven't done anything in a while. If you want to know why, just hold out to the end and I'll fill you in. Here is a bunch of free tracing tech books books2 - QUANTLABS.NET Weird Algo Strategies, Controversial Claims, and Exciting Website Updates! - QUANTLABS.NET One of the sources that I use is bettersystemtrader.com. And the title I thought was interesting. It's called Weird NASDAQ Algo Strategy. It's a bit weird, but it's also quite profitable. There's an associated video with it on YouTube. The creator, Thomas Nesnidal, shares the source code in easy language for TradeStation. He explains why you shouldn't be afraid of strategies like this and how they can work on multiple markets. Another topic I cover is about a controversial video quoting Jesus, where the creator claims to be better than 99% of all hedge fund managers. He talks about learning programming in three months and making money through ETFs and high-performing ETFs based around big tech, using Robinhood. I also provide an update on the new website coming, which will be 100% custom coded by myself using Python Django with Wagtail. I've been looking for a new web hosting provider and decided to move to DigitalOcean. The new website will be more news-driven, focusing on various investment sectors and providing free samples to generate responses. Additionally, I discuss my new deep scanning analysis for ETFs, which involves analyzing ETFs globally and categorizing them into different sectors. This method helps identify high-performing ETFs based on profitability percentage and profit factor. Lastly, I mention the importance of transparency in trading. I plan to sync my trading account with TraderSync to share my performance and learnings with the community. The new website will also feature a big news section, moving content from my Discord channels to the public site. Thank you for listening. If you want to know more, I've got my newsletter and trading PDFs at quantlabs.net/books. Stay tuned for more updates!
Devops Redux (click here to comment) 16. April 2024, In dieser Episode begrüßen wir Sujeevan
In this podcast episode, Brian from QuantLabs.net explains the rationale behind his transition from WordPress to Wagtail for delivering digital content. He discusses the strengths and drawbacks of WordPress at length, particularly its inefficiencies resulting from badly coded plugins and themes. Brian shares the journey of the transition, shedding light on the complications faced and the alternatives considered. He brings to attention the experience of other significant businesses, like Motley Fool and Google, that have moved to Wagtail from WordPress and have seen commendable improvements in their traffic levels. The podcast episode further elaborates on the advantages of shifting to the Wagtail platform, a powerful content management system. Wagtail's robustness, efficient SEO results, and suitability for teams of content contributors make it a worthwhile consideration for those looking to move away from WordPress. Brian also emphasizes the importance of prioritizing website speed for better organic traffic and shares insights on emerging web development platforms such as Django, Flask, and FastAPI. Additionally, he warns listeners about the security issues that arise from poorly coded JavaScript websites. This insightful conversation provides valuable perspectives for those pondering the move from WordPress to another platform, particularly highlighting the benefits of Wagtail. Any coders, content creators, or businesses looking to optimize their websites should not miss this insightful episode.
Join Angela and Tammy (aka tamsterdam_reads on Instagram) as they discuss the first book in the Paws and Claws Mystery Series, Murder, She Barked, by Krista Davis. ABOUT THE BOOK The Sugar Maple Inn in Wagtail, Virginia, is the country's premiere vacation hot spot for pet owners who can't bear to leave their furry friends behind. But this tourist town smells trouble when a killer goes on the prowl.... Holly Miller's life has gone to the dogs. She has no job, her boyfriend's former flame is sniffing around, and a scruffy but loveable Jack Russell Terrier is scattering crumbs all over her borrowed car. Just when she thought things couldn't get worse, a troubling phone call about her grandmother sends her rushing home to the family inn on Wagtail Mountain. The staff—and a frisky Calico kitten named Twinkletoes—adopts Holly and her new dog on arrival. But someone in this friendly town is bad to the bone. One of the employees at the inn has been killed in a hit-and-run accident—which is looking anything but accidental. Now Holly and her furry companions will have to nose out the murderer before someone else gets muzzled. YouTube Livestream: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuWxh45K2C8 GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/15810862 Paws & Claws Buddy Read Information: https://thecozymysterybookclub.com/paws-and-claws/ ~ ~ THE COZY MYSTERY BOOK CLUB ~ ~ Sign Up for The Cozy Mystery Newsletter and Receive THREE Free Cozy Mystery Themed Bingo Boards: https://mailchi.mp/db1e14027b41/xrljk... ✧ Website: http://thecozymysterybookclub.com/ ✧ Twitter: https://twitter.com/cozymysteryclub (@cozymysteryclub) ✧ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cozymystery... (@cozymysteryclub) ✧ Newsletter Landing Page: https://mailchi.mp/9e1787486d8b/theco... ✧ https://linktr.ee/cozymysteryclub Join Our Cozy Corner Chats & our Cozy Christmas Extravaganza, 12 Days of Cozies! 12 Days of Cozies runs December 1st to December 12th. Join us for daily Twitter and Instagram giveaways, nightly reading sprints from 5:00 to 8:00 PM EST, author chats from 8:00 to 9:00 PM EST, author blogs, Instagram challenges, and lots more! ** Where to Find Cozy Mystery Book Club Swag ** ✦ Zazzle: https://www.zazzle.com/store/booksare... ✦ TeeSpring: https://teespring.com/stores/angela-m... ✦ Society6: https://society6.com/writerahart ** Celebrating Cozy ** ✦ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CelebratingCozy (@celebratingcozy)
Topics covered in this episode: Heliclockter - Like datetime, but more timezone-aware Wagtail 5 Git log customization MiniJinja template engine Extras Joke Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by us! Support our work through: Our courses at Talk Python Training Python People Podcast Patreon Supporters Connect with the hosts Michael: @mkennedy@fosstodon.org Brian: @brianokken@fosstodon.org Show: @pythonbytes@fosstodon.org Join us on YouTube at pythonbytes.fm/live to be part of the audience. Usually Tuesdays at 11am PT. Older video versions available there too. Brian #1: Heliclockter - Like datetime, but more timezone-aware Suggested by Peter Nilsson The library exposes 3 classes: datetime_tz, a datetime ensured to be timezone-aware. datetime_local, a datetime ensured to be timezone-aware in the local timezone. datetime_utc, a datetime ensured to be timezone-aware in the UTC+0 timezone. Michael #2: Wagtail 5 Wagtail is the leading open-source Python CMS, based on Django. Anything you can do in Python or Django, you can do in Wagtail. Wagtail 5.0 provides even more options for your content creation experience Dark mode has arrived SVG support Enhanced accessibility checker Delete more safely Some breaking changes in it because this release removes some of the old code paths that were maintained to give people more time to adapt their code to the new upgrades Add custom validation logic to your Wagtail projects. You can now attach errors to specific child blocks in StreamField. Brian #3: Git log customization Justin Joyce Just a simple git log --oneline makes the log so much more readable, but don't stop there. --graph helps to show different branches -10 shows the last 10 commits. And this beauty in .gitconfig makes git lg mostly do what you want most of the time: [alias] lg = log --graph -10 --format='%C(yellow)%h%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)[HTML_REMOVED]%Creset' Michael #4: MiniJinja template engine MiniJinja is a powerful but minimal dependency template engine for Rust compatible with Jinja/Jinja2 Comes with integration back into Python via minijinja-py package. MiniJinja has a stronger sandbox than Jinja2 and might perform ever so slightly better in some situations. However you should be aware that due to the marshalling that needs to happen in either direction there is a certain amount of loss of information. Compiles to WebAssembly Extras Brian: The pytest Primary Power course is ready. To celebrate wrapping up the first course, pytest Primary Power is $49, the bundle is $99. Bundle: This + next 2 courses + access to repo, discussion forum, Slack, and Discord Michael: New HTMX, language course, and data science course coming at Talk Python. Add your name here to get notified. I'll be at PyBay 2023 on Oct 8, 2023 Use "friendofspeaker" with for a 20% discount on the regular tickets. Follow up from docstrings: From Rhet John Hagen: You can certainly omit the type information from the docstring when you are using typehints. This is the way I've seen almost all modern usages of Google style docstrings nowadays. They still have some examples that include the type information because the original standard pre-dated Python 3 type annotations. Here is a simple example: https://github.com/johnthagen/python-blueprint/blob/main/src/fact/lib.py#L5 This also shows off the next point that you brought up: can I document all of the exceptions that a function could raise. Google docstrings have the "Raises:" block for this, and I find it pretty nice and concise for when this is needed. Also, PyCharm can be configured to autocomplete and render Google style docstrings https://www.jetbrains.com/help/pycharm/settings-tools-python-integrated-tools.html Tools | Python Integrated Tools | Docstrings | Docstring Format: Google What's nice about this, is that then PyCharm will render the google style docstrings in the Quick Doc function (Ctrl+Q), making the headers bold and larger and lists look nice so it's easy to read. Joke: Fully optimized my algorithm
Host Chris Adams is joined by executive director of the Green Software Foundation, Asim Hussain as they dive into another mailbag session, bringing you the unanswered questions from the recent live virtual event on World Environment Day that was hosted by the Green Software Foundation on June 5 2023. Asim and Chris start with a discussion on the complexities of capturing energy consumed by memory, I/O operations, and network calls in the SCI. They explore real examples of measuring SCI on pipelines of CI/CD, showcasing projects like Green Metrics Tool and the Google Summer of Code Wagtail project. The conversation shifts to the carbon efficiency of GPUs and their environmental impact, touching on the tech industry's increasing hardware demands. They also address the potential for reusing cooling water from data centers, considering various cooling designs and their impact on water consumption.
GUI-Applikationen am Beispiel von MiaPlan 4. Mai 2023, Jochen Episode Nummer 50, wow
Guest Dawn Wages Panelist Richard Littauer Show Notes Hello and welcome to Sustain! The podcast where we talk about sustaining open source for the long haul. Today, Richard is very excited to have as his guest, Dawn Wages, who's the Python Community Advocate at Microsoft, Core Team Member for Wagtail, DjangoCon Organizer, and Director and Treasurer for the Python Software Foundation. We'll hear Dawn's journey into how she got involved with the PSF and as a Python Community Advocate at Microsoft, she explains how to become a PSF member, as well as the benefits, since they've made some changes recently. She explains where she falls on the ethical source divide and dives into the AntiRacist Ethical Source License, which is her niche. Also, she shares advice on how communities can be more sustainable at navigating conflict in their communities and reveals that we should lead with empathy. If you're looking at going to a conference this year, there's some great DjangoCon's and a PyCon going on that are worth checking out. Hit download now to hear more! [00:03:31] We hear how Dawn got involved with the PSF and how she became the Python Community Advocate at Microsoft. [00:05:23] Dawn shares why foundations in the open source space seem to continually have this community voting way of entering into the board, if she thinks it's healthy, and if she thought about it when she was working on Django's new process. [00:08:27] Both dollars and time are things which are often barriers to entry for DEI, so how does that help diversity, equity, and inclusion versus how it hurts it? Also, we hear about Wagtail and Torchbox and what they do. [00:11:40] Dawn mentioned that the PSF lowered the dollar amount and Open Collective, so now we hear the benefits it gives to an individual to become a member of the PSF, if that's something people should think about if they're working in Python, and if it's possible to join on behalf of the project and not their company. [00:13:30] We hear about a tool called, Fiscal Sponsoree, with the PSF. [00:14:50] Dawn fills us in on DjangoCon 2023, the financing structure for keeping Django going, how they think about sustainability in their community, and DjangoCon Africa 2023. [00:16:51] What does a sponsored chair do? [00:19:04] Richard wonders how Dawn thinks about the return on investment for her ultimate strategy, why these conferences, and what's the ultimate narrative arc for her seventh season open source Bajor story. Also, she explains why she's the treasurer. [00:22:56] Richard explains what the Ethical Source Movement is and wonders how Dawn holds the tension and where she falls on the ethical source divide. [00:24:37] We hear Richard's opinion on one of the problems with open source requiring a huge layout of upfront investment in hours and time and no guarantee that it will pay off, and the work being detrimental to mental health of people working on it. Dawn talks about the Anti-Racist License and explains the “PIES” check-in. [00:28:12] Dawn shares advice on how to help communities be more sustainable at navigating trauma and conflict in their communities without it becoming a drain on resources. [00:31:00] Listen here for a list of conferences you should go to that are Python and Django and where you can follow Dawn on the web. Quotes [00:08:58] “Open source is not accessible for everyone, and it's not a great method for everyone. It is people who have support elsewhere somehow.” [00:26:34] “I think there are tools we can use to be able to acknowledge the humanity of the individuals contributing, and being flexible and thoughtful about the goals we are trying to meet as a collective, and the goals the individual is trying to contribute or try to receive.” Spotlight [00:33:21] Richard's spotlight is his friend, Danielle Garber, who's a personal coach and makes amazing hand woven things. [00:34:08] Dawn's spotlight is Jeff Triplett, Director of PSF, and Coraline Ada Ehmke, lead organizer for the Organization for Ethical Source. Links SustainOSS (https://sustainoss.org/) SustainOSS Twitter (https://twitter.com/SustainOSS?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) SustainOSS Discourse (https://discourse.sustainoss.org/) podcast@sustainoss.org (mailto:podcast@sustainoss.org) Richard Littauer Twitter (https://twitter.com/richlitt?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor) Dawn Wages Twitter (https://twitter.com/BajoranEngineer) Dawn Wages Website (https://dawnwages.info/) Dawn Wages Mastodon (https://mastodon.online/@fly00gemini8712) Python Software Foundation (https://www.python.org/psf-landing/) At The Root (https://attheroot.dev/) DjangoCon 2023 (Durham, North Carolina) (https://2023.djangocon.us/) DjangoCon 2023 (Edinburgh, Scotland) (https://2023.djangocon.eu/) DjangoCon Africa 2023 ( Zanzibar, Tanzania) (https://2023.djangocon.africa/) PyCon 2023 (Salt Lake City, Utah) (https://us.pycon.org/2023/) Sustain Podcast-Episode 75: Deb Nicholson on the OSI, the future of open source, and SeaGL (https://podcast.sustainoss.org/75) Wagtail (https://wagtail.org/) Torchbox (https://torchbox.com/) Fiscal Sponsorees (https://www.python.org/psf/fiscal-sponsorees/) AntiRacist Ethical Source License (https://github.com/AtTheRoot/ATR-License) Every Thread Handwoven (Danielle Garber) (https://www.everythreadhandwoven.com/) Jeff Triplett Website (https://jefftriplett.com/about/) Coraline Ada Ehmke Website (https://where.coraline.codes/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Dawn Wages.
This week host Chris Adams is joined by Asim Hussain and Environment Variables regular Sara Bergman to discuss the hidden costs of generative AI. What's really at the tip of this iceberg and how far down does it go? They also discuss just how thirsty AI chatbots really are and developments in platform engineering. Finally, we share some opportunities for development from the world of green software.
Chris Adams is joined by cloud sustainability advocate and founder of Cloud Sustainably, Aerin Booth in this episode of TWiGS brought to you by the Green Software Foundation. On this episode Aerin provides his insight into the cloud to discuss cloud zombies, the effect that generative AI is having on the environment and exciting developments from Xbox (including a list of some of Aerin's favourite nostalgic games!). We also touch on GreenOps and the future for green software developers.
Welcome to The Ant Tales series. The Lost message is a folktale from Africa. The story is about different kinds of ants falling prey to other animals as they don't live in harmony.Free activity sheets and other downloadable resources available at www.rituvaish.com/the-lost-messageSend your artwork to rituvaish@gmail.com.TranscriptSince time immemorial, the ant has had many enemies and that was not just the birds. The Anteater fed and lived off them; the Centipede always tormented them.Among the ants, there were a few who thought it would be wise to hold a council and arrive at an arrangement, whereby they could retreat to some place of safety when attacked by birds and animals.The day of the council arrived, and all the ants gathered. There were many ideas and opinions about how to stay safe. – One was to make a small hole in the ground and make that their home. Another was to build a large and strong home, made of mud on the ground, just large enough for ants to enter. Yet another was to live in the trees, where the Anteater could never reach them, forgetting that there the ants would fall prey to birds; others who had wings just wanted to fly off when faced with trouble.Children, Or Which option do you think the ants picked? And why do you think so?They failed to arrive at a single decision since no one was ready to make adjustments.Finally, when they could come to no mutual decision, each party resolved to work in its own way, and fortify their own dwellings.Some of the groups together chose a king. Then they divided the labor and set about to work. All went as smoothly as it possibly could. Each had his appointed task and did his task well. But during all this hard work, none of the groups thought about what the final aim was and not one of them thought of protecting themselves against the different enemies.Children, what do you think will happen next?The Red-ants built their house out of mud on the ground and went to live in it. They thought they were safe. But the Anteater had no trouble leveling it to the ground in a minute, costing them many days of precious labor. The Rice-ants went to live under the ground, and they didn't fare any better. Whenever they came out, the Anteater ate them up.The Wagtail-ants fled to the trees. But the Centipede or the birds simply gobbled them up. The Gray-ants who planned to save themselves by flight were no match for the agile and quick Lizard or the Hunting-spider or the birds that pursued them in flight.When the King of Insects found out that the ants had failed in their mission, he sent them the message of unity, that they all must work together”.But do you know who his messenger was? It was the Beetle And believe it or not, he is yet to arrive at the ants. So, even today the ants do not have any harmony, for the king's message didn't reach them yet to reach them yet and hence fall prey to enemies.So, children, we are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.Hence, Teamwork is very important.
Dominik und Jochen unterhalten sich diesmal mit Simon über ein Thema, das oft eher kontrovers diskutiert wird: Cryptocurrencies, BitCoin, BlockChain, Smart Contracts und so weiter. Auf der Kontra-Seite kommen da üblicherweise moralische Einwände, während von der Pro-Seite oft eher unmoralische Angebote kommen
In this episode, Lexman interviews Thomas Tull CEO of Legendary Entertainment. Tull talks about the new movie he is finance, "Sylviculture", and how he got his famous (or infamous) auricles.
Die Bachstelze ist einer der Vögel mit den meisten altertümlichen Namen - besser gesagt ist sie diejenige, deren Trivialnamen noch heute gerne verwendet werden. Bei anderen Arten sind viele Namen schon ausgestorben, doch die Bachstelze ist eine Brauchtumspflegerin: Noch heute heißt sie im Norden oft Wippsteert oder Ackermantje, in Köln Wibbelstetzje und so weiter und so fort. Das zeigt, wie eng der Vogel mit dem Menschen verbunden ist. Während Antonia mit der Bachstelze Erinnerungen an besondere Momente am Rhein verbindet, brütet die Bachstelze bei Philipp hoch oben am Gebäude, ohne nennenswerte Fließgewässer in der Nähe. Sie gibt es in Siedlungen und auf dem Acker - nie ganz häufig, aber immer irgendwie da. Und obwohl sie keinen schmetternden und lauten Gesang hat, ist die Bachstelze trotz allem eine echte Frühlingsbotin -und sie macht Hoffnung. Auch darum geht es in dieser Folge.
Anlässlich des diesjährigen Japantags
Dominik und Jochen unterhalten sich über FastAPI. FastAPI ist ein noch sehr junges, aber trotzdem recht verbreitetes Webframework für Python, das darauf ausgelegt ist, die moderneren Sprachfeatures von Python wie Typannotationen und Async-Fähigkeit besser zu nutzen als traditionellere Webframeworks wie Django oder Flask. Shownotes Unsere E-Mail für Fragen, Anregungen & Kommentare: hallo@python-podcast.de News aus der Szene PEP 665 -- A file format to list Python dependencies for reproducibility of an application | Brett Cannon CPython on WASM At long last, Black is no longer a beta product! | Stability Policy Django wird jetzt auch wie in DEP 8 angekündigt mit black formatiert PyTest 7.0 release HATEOAS — An Alternative Explanation The future of editing in Wagtail Prototype Fund EdgeDB 1.0 Release | asyncpg -- A fast PostgreSQL Database Client Library for Python/asyncio | uvloop is a fast, drop-in replacement of the built-in asyncio event loop. uvloop is implemented in Cython and uses libuv under the hood. Twitter: My dental hygienist: "Are you flossing regularly?" Me: "Do you backup your laptop and photos regularly?" Laravel Livewire mit Christoph Rumpel | Alpine.Js | Caleb Porzio Werbung Exklusiv-Deal + ein Geschenk
Hello there, my name is Danny Yeoman, wild bird expert for Pets Corner and developer of Peter & Paul bird foods. Welcome to the next of a number of podcasts detailing some of the amazing birds that we see and feed in our gardens. Every week we'll be looking at a different bird and this week we'll be looking at the FANTASTIC Yellow Wagtail. For more information regarding Peter & Paul Wild Bird Foods, please check out the Peter & Paul website at www.peter-and-paul.com or pop into one of our wonderful Pets Corner stores and the nearest store to you can be found at the Pets Corner website at www.petscorner.co.uk
Rachel Bowes from Lifeline on supporting your mental health, Group 9 Rugby League's Andrew Hinchcliffe on their finals, and the Golden Crow Awards! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Diesmal ist das Importsystem von Python Thema. Johannes, Dominik und Jochen sitzen endlich mal wieder zusammen vor Ort im Wintergarten. Im News-Teil ist gleich mal ein blöder Fehler, weil Jochen den Artikel über den Umstieg von scipy auf das Meson Buildsystem nicht genau genug gelesen hat (meson ist nur 4 statt 100 mal schneller, sry). Wer Lust auf ein kleines Audioexperiment hat folge bitte dem Permalink. Hier nochmal die aktuelle Episode, allerdings nur von Ultraschall gerendert und nicht durch Auphonic veredelt. Wer Lust hat, kann sich die beiden Audiodateien ja mal im Vergleich anhören. Ich finde, dass das Auphonic-Audio von oben tatsächlich ein bisschen besser anhört (vor allem bei der loudness-Normalisierung). Aber vielleicht habe ich ja auch Ultraschall falsch eingestellt. Ich wäre jedenfalls durchaus daran interessiert herauszufinden, was ich da noch verbessern kann :). Folgende Plugins habe ich bei Ultraschall aktiviert: Equalizer (ultraschall 5) Ambience (ultraschall Studio) Ultraschall Dynamics LUFS_Loudness auf dem Master Shownotes Unsere E-Mail für Fragen, Anregungen & Kommentare: hallo@python-podcast.de News aus der Szene Apple Adds a Backdoor to iMesssage and iCloud Storage Linus über Impfungen PEP 632 -- Deprecate distutils module | Moving SciPy to the Meson build system Python 3.10.0rc1 - first 3.10 release candidate Github Copilot ‘Tortured phrases’ give away fabricated research papers - Colossal Data :) Podcast Episode: Yann LeCun über self supervised learning etc.. | Attention Is All You Need Importsystem Python behind the scenes #11: how the Python import system works | Diskussion auf Hacker News The import system (Referenzdokumentation) Artikel auf Realpython: Python import: Advanced Techniques and Tips Podcast Episode: Episode 72: Starting With FastAPI and Examining Python's Import System Singleton marshal — Internal Python object serialization | shelve — Python object persistence | About Dill Benutzung von importlib in den Tests: Make wagtailmedia media chooser compatible with wagtail 2.13 #136 | Erster Stream zum wagtailmedia PR Picks GitHub octo oh my git: An open source game about learning Git! pre-commit A framework for managing and maintaining multi-language pre-commit hooks. Öffentliches Tag auf konektom
Welcome to The Ant Tales series. The Lost message is a folktale from Africa. The story is about different kinds of ants falling prey to other animals as they don't live in harmony.Free activity sheets and other downloadable resources available at www.rituvaish.com/the-lost-messageSend your artwork to rituvaish@gmail.com.TranscriptSince time immemorial, the ant has had many enemies and that was not just the birds. The Anteater fed and lived off them; the Centipede always tormented them.Among the ants, there were a few who thought it would be wise to hold a council and arrive at an arrangement, whereby they could retreat to some place of safety when attacked by birds and animals.The day of the council arrived, and all the ants gathered. There were many ideas and opinions about how to stay safe. – One was to make a small hole in the ground and make that their home. Another was to build a large and strong home, made of mud on the ground, just large enough for ants to enter. Yet another was to live in the trees, where the Anteater could never reach them, forgetting that there the ants would fall prey to birds; others who had wings just wanted to fly off when faced with trouble.Children, Or Which option do you think the ants picked? And why do you think so?They failed to arrive at a single decision since no one was ready to make adjustments.Finally, when they could come to no mutual decision, each party resolved to work in its own way, and fortify their own dwellings.Some of the groups together chose a king. Then they divided the labor and set about to working. All went as smoothly as it possibly could. Each had his appointed task and did his task well. But during all this hard work, none of the groups thought what the final aim was and not one of them thought of protecting themselves against the different enemies.Children, what do you think will happen next?The Red-ants built their house of mud on the ground and went to live in it. They thought they were safe. But the Anteater had no trouble leveling it to the ground in a minute, costing them many days of precious labor. The Rice-ants went to live under the ground, and they didn't fare any better. Whenever they came out, the Anteater ate them up.The Wagtail-ants fled to the trees. But the Centipede or the birds simply gobbled them up. The Gray-ants who planned to save themselves by flight were no match for the agile and quick Lizard or the Hunting-spider or the birds that pursued them in flight.When the King of Insects found out that the ants had failed in their mission, he sent them the message of unity, that they all must work together”.But do you know who his messenger was? It was the Beetle And believe it or not, he is yet to arrive at the ants. So, even today the ants do not have any harmony, for the king's message didn't reach them yet to reach them yet and hence fall prey to enemies.So, children, we are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.Hence, Teamwork is very important.
A sonic portrait of a bird with a twitchy tail. Sheet(p. 13): https://musopen.org/music/23775-25-easy-and-progressive-etudes-op-100/ Twitter: @PianoRhapsody Email: pianorhapsodypodcast@gmail.com Find PianoRhapsody on SoundCloud for this recording and more!
Welcome to Story Station Season 2, Episode 6 In this episode, you can listen to 2 Australian Stories. The first story is titled “Bahloo the Moon and the Daens”. What happens when some mortal men defy the great moon? Listen to this story to find out! The second story is titled “Deereeree the Wagtail and the Rainbow”. Bibbee, Deereeree's neighbor, must go to great lengths to convince Deereeree to marry him, do you think he will succeed? Hope you enjoy it! ============================================= Listen to Story Station on: Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/56ibkvBTlE9nQJqzsqoktS Apple Podcasts- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/story-station-stories-from-around-the-world/id1508876382 Google Podcasts- https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xZDE3MzhhYy9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw== ============================================= Sources: “Bahloo the Moon and the Daens” from Australian Legendary Tales by Mrs. K. Langloh Parker “Deereeree the Wagtail and the Rainbow” from Australian Legendary Tales by Mrs. K. Langloh Parker
Dawn’s personal siteDawn on Twitter @DawnWagesSaysWagtail Documentation SprintAt the Root: Wagtail + Gatsby + GitPod - PyConline AU 2020 talkWagtail CMSDecolonizing Technology on Martin Luther King Day 2021Biometric Insecurity - Carina C. Zona @PyConline AU 2020Support the ShowThis podcast is a labor of love and does not have any ads or sponsors. To support the show, please consider recommending a book from LearnDjango.com, signing up for the free weekly Django News newsletter, or learning more about Button a simpler deployment story for Django.
The crew chats about the top two CMS frameworks for Python.
You find yourself awake in the middle of the night and there is a willy wagtail singing to the moon. Are you loosing your mind, or does this bird occasionally turn into a were-willy?
You find yourself awake in the middle of the night and there is a willy wagtail singing to the moon. Are you loosing your mind, or does this bird occasionally turn into a were-willy?
You find yourself awake in the middle of the night and there is a willy wagtail singing to the moon. Are you loosing your mind, or does this bird occasionally turn into a were-willy?
Hello there, my name is Danny Yeoman, wild bird expert for Pets Corner and developer of Peter & Paul bird foods. Welcome to the next of a number of podcasts detailing some of the amazing birds that we see and feed in our gardens. Every couple of weeks we’ll be looking at a different bird and this week we’ll looking at the sensational Grey Wagtail. For more information regarding Peter & Paul Wild Bird Foods, please check out the Peter & Paul website at: www.peter-and-paul.com or pop into one of our wonderful Pets Corner stores and the nearest store to you can be found at the Pets Corner website at: www.petscorner.co.uk
My guest this week is Dave Infante, a reporter in Charleston, South Carolina, who recently wrote a piece for Mel Magazine about the curious intersection of White Claw drinking culture and the right-wing militant boogaloo movement. If that sounds bewildering and niche, then strap in. You might want to hear more from Dave after listening to this episode, in which case I recommend you sign up for Dave's newsletter at fingers.substack.com. This is a condensed version of Episode 6. Paying subscribers to the Brutal South newsletter get access to the full uncut interview and other subscriber-only content going forward. Hit the Subscribe Now button below to sign up for $5 a month, or click here to read a quick Q&A about how Substack subscriptions work. The image at the top is Wagtail and Hibiscus (c. 1747 - 1797) by Kano Toshun. This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at brutalsouth.substack.com/subscribe
LearnWagtail.comCoding for EverybodyKalob’s Udemy coursesawesome-wagtailThis Week in WagtailDjango Search TutorialHow to Get Hired as a Django DeveloperWagtail Slack channelFrom Burn-Out to $100M in ARR with Jason Cohen of WP Engine
Hello there, my name is Danny Yeoman, wild bird expert for Pets Corner and developer of Peter & Paul bird foods. Welcome to the next of a number of podcasts detailing some of the amazing birds that we see and feed in our gardens. Every couple of weeks we’ll be looking at a different bird and this week we’ll looking at the stunning Pied Wagtail. For more information regarding Peter & Paul Wild Bird Foods, please check out the Peter & Paul website at: www.peter-and-paul.com or pop into one of our wonderful Pets Corner stores and the nearest store to you can be found at the Pets Corner website at: www.petscorner.co.uk
In der nunmehr zwölften Episode reden wir über das Deployment von Webapplikationen. Themen waren diesmal: Soll man einen eigenen Server mieten oder doch lieber eine fertige Plattform zum Hosten benutzen? Wie kommt der Code eigentlich auf die Maschine? Was für Services müssen für eine Webapplikation üblicherweise so laufen? Shownotes Unsere E-Mail für Fragen, Anregungen & Kommentare: hallo@python-podcast.de News aus der Szene Django for Professionals Data Labeling That You Can Feel Good About - Episode 89 mit Cloudfactory Unterstützungsanfrage für Pretalx auf dem CCCamp2019 Projektmanagement Software: Taiga, Trello, Jira Episode #216: Digging into Visual Studio Code PySimpleGUI EPISODE 021 Django Co-Creator - Simon Willison Deployment von Webapplikationen Domain Name System Comic, der DNS erklärt IaaS vs PaaS vs SaaS Divio Wagtail und Django-CMS Hosting Heroku, Pythonanywhere EC2, Lightsale, Digitalocean, Container bei Hetzner Docker, Docker-Compose, Vagrant Ansible, Chef and Puppet, SaltStack Redis, Varnish Caddy, Whitenoise Gunicorn, uWSGI Celery, Flower ownCloud, Dropbox, Google Drive Let's Encrypt OpenVPN MQTT, GraphQL daphne Öffentliches Tag auf konektom
In this episode co-hosts Kristina Stykos and Emily Howe discuss who can wear a sundress, being chronically too busy, mediocre “self care” advice, irritating sympathy, real bootstraps, Brock’s decision to eat Emily’s calfskin boots, pumping gas in a hoop skirt, trying to ID the farmer with red suspenders, girth and beltlines, problematic dipsticks, mad babies, choosing new glasses frames, a leg-pulling incident, being afflicted by gullibility, a Finnish word having to do with reindeer travel, when jokes are bad, tadpole development, talking like Richie from Boston, cyber-stalking a mysterious Facebook friend, the confusing relationship between the Arctic and Antarctica, healthy skepticism about celebrity E.T.s, how John recycles the covers of Romance novels, grandma’s covert attempt to impart wisdom about the birds and bees, the passing on of culturally acceptable machismo, a husband’s hand illustrated telephone logs as works of art and business venture, an idea for English teachers, how the grandchildren turned a rose garden into “The Hotel”, a playhouse under the ferns, the institutional destruction of random bushes, when friends visit you on the job, restoring the gardens at the old Shire Inn, a new Vermont beer called “Fred”, two different kinds of wine including the gas station kind, sensitive taste buds and their various abilities, a brief look at the whys and wherefores of when couples fight in public - and so much more! Featuring music from Vermont musicians & friends: Green Mountain Fever with Rick Davis and Davey Davis [Wild Daisy]; Val McCallum [Charlie’s Coal]; Wagtail with Susannah Blachly [Let the Light In]. Subscribe to our podcast on iTunes, Apple Podcasts or Youtube, or tune in Fridays at 11 am to hear this show live on WFVR-FM South Royalton, Vermont 96.5 FM, streaming online and rebroadcast at Royalton Community Radio and visit our website at www.11thHourRadio.com. Made possible in part by generous support from station sponsors Howvale Farm, The Tunbridge Grease Collective, Rivendell Restoration and the Mountain Folk Concert Series. For more information: 11th Hour Radio Official Website 11th Hour Radio on Facebook Kristina on Facebook Emily on Facebook Kristina's Website
Heute haben wir uns zum zweiten Mal mit Johannes getroffen, um mal wieder über Django zu reden. Diesmal aber schwerpunktmässig über Content Management Systeme im Allgemeinen und wagtail im Speziellen. Shownotes Unsere E-Mail für Fragen, Anregungen & Kommentare: hallo@python-podcast.de Neues aus der Szene Django verwendet jetzt black zur Codeformatierung Wo wir unterwegs waren IndieWebCamp Düsseldorf 2019 beyond tellerrand Meta django-cast hat dank Dominik jetzt Kommentare (Sind auf dem Frühjahrssprint der PyDDF hinzugekommen) django-contrib-comments django-threadedcomments django-fluent-comments Dank django-watson sind jetzt auch Volltextsuche und ein bisschen faceted navigation drin Dieser Artikel hat bei der Implementation der Navigation sehr geholfen Indiewebcamp Into the personal website verse Nothing fails like success - "social media is a garbage fire.." pinboard konektom Indieweb - getting started guide Keybase IndieAuth Webmention Micropub Microsub Microformats2 django-indieweb Django und Content Management Systeme Django CMS Wagtail Mezzanine Torchbox - die Firma hinter Wagtail Wagtail Demoprojekt wagtail-bakery - Baut aus per Wagtail erstellten Seiten statische django-bakery - Generiert aus Django-Sites statische Seiten wagtailmenus - Menus für Wagtail Plugins für Django - Talk auf der letzten djangocon europe Picks micro.blog is a service for independent microblogs Take back your web Konferenztalk von Tantek Çelik
Mezzazine: http://mezzanine.jupo.org/ Django CMS: https://www.django-cms.org/en/ Wagtail: https://wagtail.io/ Djedi: https://djedi-cms.org/ feincms: https://github.com/feincms/feincms Autor: José Jiménez Síguenos en https://twitter.com/RadioDevPodcast y https://t.me/RadioDev
Wagtail CMS Wagtail Slack Channel Torchbox Drupal Royal College of Arts Wagtail Core Team PEP 405: Python Virtual Environments CodeRed CMS Wagtail Features wagtail-alt-generator DjangoConUS 2018 - Django and Machine Learning awesome-wagtail awesome-django wagtail-experiments A/B testing SHAMELESS PLUGS William's books on Django Carlton's website Noumenal
Si quieres ver el vídeo con slides: https://youtu.be/d7PfyUoZ2j4 Wagtail es un "Content Management System" basado en Django, ¿por qué lo podría necesitar tu empresa, si el negocio no tiene nada que ver con un blog? En esta charla veremos las características que tiene Wagtail que lo hacen suficientemente atractivo como para que una plataforma de venta de entradas como ticketea basara su web principal en esta tecnología. Partiendo de las razones de arquitectura, también veremos detalles técnicos, desde un enfoque práctico, orientado a la escalabilidad y a la sencillez. ------------- La PyConES es una conferencia de tres días de duración en la que se dan cita profesionales y entusiastas del lenguaje de programación Python que difunden su experiencia en varias sesiones de charlas técnicas. Por su naturaleza, la audiencia de la PyConES procede no sólo de sectores tecnológicos como desarrollo web, Business Intelligence o desarrollo de juegos sino también del mundo académico, siendo utilizado por multitud de profesores e investigadores.
In this episode Richie Blue and I sit down with Marcus Bey aka Mr. Wagtail or better known as M.A.W. Cleaning and Music on Youtube. We speak about his beginings in the industry his journey to where he is now and get to know the elusive man behind the camera you dont want to miss this episode! www.outlawwindowcleaner.com www.blackdiamondsqueegee.com www.futureofcleaning.com
If you are operating a website that needs to publish and manage content on a regular basis, a CMS (Content Management System) becomes the obvious choice for reducing your workload. There are a plethora of options available, but if you are looking for a solution that leverages the power of Python and exposes its flexibility then you should take a serious look at Wagtail. In this episode Tom Dyson explains how Wagtail came to be created, what sets it apart from other options, and when you should implement it for your projects.
I am thrilled that my first interview with a cozy author is with the New York Times Bestselling Krista Davis. She has two delightful cozy series, the Domestic Diva mystery series and the Paws & Claws mysteries, set in pet-friendly Wagtail, Virginia. I'll be giving away a copy of her most-recent Domestic Diva novel, The Diva Steals a Chocolate Kiss, as part of my April giveaway, along with books by Lisa Klink (signed by the author!) and Steph Cha, and a $10 Amazon gift certificate. To enter, just sign up in the box on the right. Her 10th Domestic Diva mystery, The Diva Serves High Tea, will be published on June 7th. We chat about cozies - including the conversation around #SaveOurCozies, where readers are banding together to convince publishers that cozy mysteries are worth supporting. For a little more on what's going on, you can check out posts on these sites: The Cozy Mystery List Blog The Book's The Thing Any others I should link to? E-mail me at Laura@DestinationMystery.com If you'd rather read than listen, below is the transcript of our chat. Enjoy! Welcome to Destination Mystery, a podcast for readers who love a good mystery. I'm Laura Brennan. Krista Davis writes what she knows. Like her protagonist, Sophie Winston, Krista had a gregarious Ocicat named Mochie; lived for a time in Old Town, Alexandria; and loves to entertain family and friends. Her Domestic Diva mystery series is a three-time Agatha Award nominee, and both of her series were on the New York Times Bestseller list, with Murder, She Barked, the first in her Paws & Claws mystery series, hitting the top ten. Her cozies include recipes, tips for gracious living, great characters and tremendous heart. I don’t know how she does it all. Laura Brennan: Krista, thank you for joining me. Krista Davis: Thank you so much for having me, Laura. LB: Have you always wanted to be a writer? KD: You know, I think I have. I went through periods when I did other things in life, but I go way way way back to grade school when I wanted to write and to read. And I even remember sitting in the window of my very boring house on a very boring street and thinking that books could just take you anywhere in the world and even to outer space. They could really introduce you to people that you would never meet otherwise. And I just thought they were marvelous. LB: Tell me how the Domestic Diva -- that was your first series -- tell me how the Domestic Diva mystery series started. KD: My agent suggested that I write a proposal for a different series. And when the editors were looking at that, they came back and asked, would this appeal to readers of Real Simple? Well, I had no idea what Real Simple was. So I hopped in the car right away and went to the CVS, and it was actually in the drugstore, looking at the magazine that the diva concept came to me. Real Simple in my mind is sort of the anti-Martha. It's for people who want the lifestyle, and the nice food and the nice home and all the things that Martha Stewart is about, but just not so complicated. So I was just standing there and I thought, oh, gosh, there could be two Domestic Divas, one who does things simply and the other one who just has these just incredibly difficult, wonderful things that she does. So the original idea before them was -- everyone thought it was going to go. They were very happy about it, they got good reads on it and at an editorial meeting it just was killed in like two seconds. So, I think that the editors felt kind of bad about that, because they really thought it was going to be purchased. So they came back again to my agent and said, send us three ideas and we’ll tell you which one we’re interested in looking at. Which almost never happens, but they did it. Which shows that you never know what could happen. And the one that they chose was the one that I was calling the Dueling Divas. I got the call nine years ago yesterday.
The most relaxing sound ever, in this podcast!>>Listen to the story about Mountain wagtail#15 Mountain wagtail.mp3Cannot listen? Download the sound file from here! Mountain wagtail(Motacilla clara) Photo by ..
The most relaxing sound ever, in this podcast!>>Listen to the story about Mountain wagtail#15 Mountain wagtail.mp3Cannot listen? Download the sound file from here! Mountain wagtail(Motacilla clara) Photo by ..