Next Day Video

Next Day Video

Lightning Talks

Lightning Talks

Making Games With PPB

Making Games With PPB

Machine Learning by Example

Machine Learning by Example

Testing from the Ground Up

Testing from the Ground Up

CircuitPython Workshop

CircuitPython Workshop

Implementing EPPO on SMW

Implementing EPPO on SMW

WMF Strategy Process

WMF Strategy Process

Пікірлер

  • @isodoubIet
    @isodoubIet4 күн бұрын

    This talk is vague, vapid nonsense.

  • @kienphan6436
    @kienphan64366 күн бұрын

    great talk thank you!

  • @Manuelstechnology
    @Manuelstechnology10 күн бұрын

    Emmanuel Ifediora here, ALX SE brought me here

  • @benedictabudu5280
    @benedictabudu5280Күн бұрын

    You understand am? Cos this thing dey confuse me

  • @blenderpanzi
    @blenderpanzi18 күн бұрын

    Pretty sure the default system encoding is defined with the LANG environment variable (under Unix), and these days it's always UTF-8. (Under Windows it might be UTF-16.) Oh, this talk is really old and about Python 2! Welp. It also claims at one point that characters are represented as codepoints. Well, a character might span multiple codepoints. To be more clear people talk about graphemes.

  • @jakobw135
    @jakobw135Ай бұрын

    Which HARDWARE is recommended and compatible with running Linux normally and even optimally? And which manufacturers should one STAY AWAY FROM with respect to Linux?

  • @MrZix44
    @MrZix442 күн бұрын

    Avoid Nvidia if you're worried about running "optimally". Otherwise, amd and Intel cpus and amd gpus work perfectly well on Linux (don't know about Intel gpus, never used them before)

  • @rainrelaxer9678
    @rainrelaxer9678Ай бұрын

    11 years later and still very helpful, many thanks

  • @user-fq5ud2vj9n
    @user-fq5ud2vj9nАй бұрын

    Nwnjwmgjjgegjmrffgn

  • @dokwonsuh
    @dokwonsuhАй бұрын

    Half Python, Half Cocaine

  • @OnlyDjango
    @OnlyDjangoАй бұрын

    django-db-parti last update 10 years ago (-:

  • @riittap9121
    @riittap9121Ай бұрын

    Parts of it went way over my head, but it was still quite interesting for someone, who has just started to wonder 'how Python works'. Great stuff!

  • @codeaarambh
    @codeaarambhАй бұрын

    Good talk

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffectАй бұрын

    "I hate code and I want as little of it as possible in our product" - Jack Diederich "We usually think of code as an ASSET, a valuable thing that we shouldn't delete. Code is a LIABILITY - all code is cost " - Dan North

  • @kullekusk8136
    @kullekusk8136Ай бұрын

    Has this evolved since? I'd like to learn coding, and this would make it possible! Any news the last decade?

  • @ReflectionOcean
    @ReflectionOcean2 ай бұрын

    By YouSum Live 00:01:03 Silicon Valley's center shifts with innovation. 00:02:31 Startups' big ideas challenge identity and sanity. 00:08:03 Transforming email into a powerful to-do list protocol. 00:12:03 Disrupting traditional universities with innovative learning models. 00:14:01 Internet's dominance in entertainment delivery over cable. 00:17:23 The need for a visionary startup to rival Apple. 00:19:40 Steve Jobs' impact on Silicon Valley. 00:20:23 The vacuum in innovation post-Steve Jobs. 00:20:36 The need for a new visionary in tech. 00:21:12 Revisiting Moore's Law for hardware advancement. 00:22:07 The potential of a sufficiently smart compiler. 00:27:30 Disrupting traditional medical diagnosis methods. 00:27:50 Embracing early detection for health issues. 00:34:00 The evolution of property and copyright in the digital age. 00:38:44 The importance of physical interactions in innovation. 00:39:46 Rethinking education: Credentials from individuals, not institutions. 00:40:19 Historical perspective: Universities' origins in personal certification. 00:41:27 Moral dilemma: Funding projects impacting genetic code. 00:41:42 Ethical considerations: Evaluating potential impact on society. 00:45:05 Startup strategy: Focus on hacker-oriented products, not direct competition. 00:45:24 Innovation in manufacturing: Startups bridging gaps in production processes. 00:46:55 Future possibilities: Startups revolutionizing manufacturing with new technologies. 00:47:23 Acknowledgment: Speaker's role in the history of PyCon. By YouSum Live

  • @111skal111
    @111skal1112 ай бұрын

    I watched so many videos trying to understand self and at 1:21:20 I finally had it explained where I could understand it. Thank you

  • @cryptotechcoder
    @cryptotechcoder2 ай бұрын

    Any alx student here?

  • @user-vz3ek6np2s
    @user-vz3ek6np2s2 ай бұрын

    Seems like he left you tube also , he posted his last video before 4 years.

  • @user-vz3ek6np2s
    @user-vz3ek6np2s2 ай бұрын

    Watched this video today in 2024 April, 😄He is pro in meta class before 11 years, The one concept which is very help in programming , i got to know today after working 5 years in ptyhon

  • @JuanGoldenboy
    @JuanGoldenboy2 ай бұрын

    Massimo di pierro I LOVE you

  • @soonshin-sam-kwon
    @soonshin-sam-kwon2 ай бұрын

    The reason why I still use Python.

  • @reinasama904
    @reinasama9042 ай бұрын

    I wish they also shared with us the timing/side-channel attacks part in the open space, what an amazing talk!

  • @adamjumper5818
    @adamjumper58183 ай бұрын

    Where do I download the software I’m disabled thinking about learning I can’t type that well

  • @alexhunter0815
    @alexhunter08153 ай бұрын

    2024 and Debian still feels like a nightmare

  • @kennethOdoh1
    @kennethOdoh13 ай бұрын

    Such a gem 💎😍 Thank you so much!

  • @AlesNajmann
    @AlesNajmann3 ай бұрын

    Never trust Python dev who tells you that whitespace is not significant 😛

  • @Adamthegeek70
    @Adamthegeek704 ай бұрын

    I love Linus, and I have always thought the world needs to get thicker skin. The idea that it is ok to be so weak that other peoples words can break you. Baffles me and it is pathetic. Like Linus... I just don't care.

  • @reallegendcode
    @reallegendcode4 ай бұрын

    Who is here because of ALX SE or Holberton

  • @patrickdeschambault8102
    @patrickdeschambault81024 ай бұрын

    Is this something that has been commercialized before ?

  • @PerfectArmonic
    @PerfectArmonic4 ай бұрын

    Why nobody think until now to mechanically turn an old QWERTY keyboard in a steno keyboard? I mean there are millions of old “unused anymore” keyboards. And sitting somewhere in a corner full of dust. Why not take them and dismantle and turn them in steno keyboards?

  • @Sakari_369
    @Sakari_3694 ай бұрын

    Wow what suckers these guys, have some respect for the guy, not everyone can be nice when they have to write Linux code all day long, just to get your OS running so you can watch KZread on your phone without lag. ;-)

  • @pinakadhara7650
    @pinakadhara76504 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this amazing talk. I have watched this video time and again from the beginning of my programming journey and every time I take away something new!

  • @w2FCQugGMSt5YYF6
    @w2FCQugGMSt5YYF64 ай бұрын

    You can hear someone saying uuuh at 1:25

  • @QuestionMark43
    @QuestionMark435 ай бұрын

    I love hearing people in the last discuss problems that are solved today! Like the argument about paying for copies of digital content. The answer that every company (books, music, software) has found is just implementing a subscription model and requiring a sign in to access software, or some type of internet connection at least. That way, people rather just pay the subscription and get regular updates to their apps, music, new books, and UI QOL updates as opposed to pirating older versions of the software or music. I feel like listening to the types of problems that people have discussed in the past and how those problems were solved could key us into what sorts of reasoning we need to solve the problems of today.

  • @ms-ex8em
    @ms-ex8em5 ай бұрын

    does any1 here know how to run the dragon py dragon 32 emulator? thanks..............

  • @pajeetsingh
    @pajeetsingh5 ай бұрын

    “If implementation is hard to explain then it may be good” Reminds me of pthread vs c++ thread. It is easy to implement in c++ but unless you program in pthread, various multithreading problems, you will not learn the conceptual ideas related to it. It’s about whether you are becoming code money for corporations or actually becoming a good programmer.

  • @18x9
    @18x95 ай бұрын

    At 30:11, for solving the issue of having to write and maintain applications for each distro he said "you can solve it by linking everything statically and giving your own file system ... but you really have to do that right now" and goes onto explain why. Why don't more developers do this? Have any of you or someone you know done this, considered it, or gotten close / done something similar. Do you know any examples with more popular software? What did mean specifically by "but you really have to do that right now" and why is that the case?

  • @donlacaya4323
    @donlacaya43235 ай бұрын

    Watching this in 2024. This video tutorial is still golden!

  • @notyou8397
    @notyou83975 ай бұрын

    I am going to start not a startup, but a graham cracker company called graham um’s

  • @wattsfield1889
    @wattsfield18895 ай бұрын

    Good talk! Happy I found it

  • @reborngarage1
    @reborngarage15 ай бұрын

    Great video thank you for this !

  • @TheEightTwenty
    @TheEightTwenty5 ай бұрын

    Saw that Letterman episode with Grace in it. Also... hardware *is* actually still the *hit. :)

  • @viaantares
    @viaantares5 ай бұрын

    This dude is real life Michael Scott.

  • @kameradoanti9901
    @kameradoanti99016 ай бұрын

    this is actually a great video. should've been seen by more.

  • @martinborus9531
    @martinborus95316 ай бұрын

    This talk is great even after 10 years. Some of the syntax has changed, for example in 2023: at 44:05 the "with ignored" is now from contextlib import suppress with suppress(OSERROR): and the "izip" command is gone, zip now creates a generator.

  • @fwily2580
    @fwily25806 ай бұрын

    Likes to read stuff to others as fast as he can. Usually in a non-sentence structure way. Arm and hand waving.

  • @soonshin-sam-kwon
    @soonshin-sam-kwon6 ай бұрын

    damn... still or even more relevant these days after 10 years. No fancy words, straightforward. Great honor to have good people on python in the past although today many went to other lang and communities.

  • @ugood
    @ugood6 ай бұрын

    50:15 this realization is exactly the one that golang authors had back in 2007 when they envisioned exactly this very programming model of having normal, readable code that runs on coroutines, hiding behind a single keyword, but instead of "async" they chose "go". it's incredible how genius people end up on finding the same genius solutions to the same problem. Your book made me interested in programming with it's alive and practical approach but your python talks made me mature and I eventually switch to golang. Very thankful and grateful to you, Dear David 🙏❤

  • @fwily2580
    @fwily25806 ай бұрын

    Power Point!!!! Janet Jackson microphone!! Reading fast!!!! Great!!!!

  • @northshorepx
    @northshorepx6 ай бұрын

    I know this is old - but thanks for sharing.

  • @giulliagomes5993
    @giulliagomes59936 ай бұрын

    This is a great video - thank you very much. You did in less than 30 minutes what my MSc couldn't do in a whole semester.