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Back from PyCon Canada 2012

I just got back a few days ago from the 2012 edition of PyCon Canada , which was a great success. I wanted to thank the team who invited me for a fantastic experience: Diana Clarke who as conference chair did an incredible job, Greg Wilson from Software Carpentry with whom I had a chance to interact a lot (he already has a long list of ideas for the IPython notebook in teaching contexts we're discussing), Mike DiBernardo and the rest of the PyConCa team. They ran a conference with a great vibe and tons of opportunity for engaging discussion. Thanks to Greg I also had a chance to give a couple of more academically-oriented talks at U. Toronto facilities, both at the Sunnybrook hospital and their SciNet HPC center, where we had some great discussions. I look forward to future collaborations with some of the folks there. The PyConCa kindly invited me to deliver the closing keynote for the conference, and I tried to provide a presentation on the part of the Python world that I...

Help save open space in the Bay Area by protecting Knowland Park from development

Vote NO on new Tax Measure A1 Update:  there is now evidence that Zoo officials have actually violated election laws  in their zeal to promote measure A1. I normally only blog about technical topics, but the destruction of a beautiful piece of open space in the Bay Area is imminent, and I want to at least do a little bit to help prevent this disaster. In short: there's a tax measure on the November ballot, Measure A1 , that would impose a parcel tax on all residences and businesses in Alameda County to fund the Oakland Zoo for the next 25 years .  The way the short text on the ballot is worded makes it appear as something geared towards animal care for a cash-strapped Zoo.  The sad reality is that the full text of the measure allows the Zoo to use these funds for a very controversial expansion plan that includes a 34,000 sq. ft. visitor center, gift shop and restaurant serviced by a ski gondola atop one of the last pristine remaining ridges in Knowland Park, ...

Blogging with the IPython notebook

Update (May 2014): Please note that these instructions are outdated. while it is still possible (and in fact easier) to blog with the Notebook, the exact process has changed now that IPython has an official conversion framework. However, Blogger isn't the ideal platform for that (though it can be made to work). If you are interested in using the Notebook as a tool for technical blogging, I recommend looking at Jake van der Plas' Pelican support or Damián Avila's support in Nikola . Update: made full github repo for blog-as-notebooks, and updated instructions on how to more easily configure everything and use the newest nbconvert for a more streamlined workflow. Since the notebook was introduced with IPython 0.12 , it has proved to be very popular, and we are seeing great adoption of the tool and the underlying file format in research and education. One persistent question we've had since the beginning (even prior to its official release) was whether it would...