On Mar 18, 1:41 pm, fumanchu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Mar 17, 6:25 pm, dundeemt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > I agree - the balance wasn't as good. We can all agree that HowTos > > and Intros are a necessary part of the conference talks track, but as > > Robert pointed out some talks should be of a more advanced nature. I > > enjoy those that stretch my brain. Alex M, Pyke and NetworkIO and > > Mark Hammond's keynote were among my favorite talks. > > Raymond Hettinger's talk on collections was not only one of my > favorites, it was apparently lots of other people's too--the room was > PACKED. I can't recall seeing any other talk that was even close to > seating capacity. > > Robert Brewer > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The "Using PyGame and PySight to Create an Interactive Halloween Activity (#9)" session with Mr. John Harrison was also quite full as was the one for Pyglet. I think the nose presentation had people sitting on the floor. Geeks like games! I know I do! Mike -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list