This procedure has been adopted from the pycon code of conduct and the Ada Initiative’s guide titled “Conference anti-harassment/Responding to Reports”.
This month we had two members give presentations one after the other.
This month I gave a presentation to introduce MadPUG’s members to Testing. The topics we covered were:
I realized today that I never explicitly licensed the content of this blog.
After receiving the permission of Bill and Oran, I have decided to use
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0. The full license is also available
here.
At this month’s meetup Oran Looney gave an hour long presentation about IPython, SciPy, and Pandas. After the meeting, One of the member’s new to the group, Bill Blondeau, sent me an email with feedback. With his permission, I’m posting a slightly edited group of excerpts from their email
We had a great turnout for Feburary’s MadPUG meetup, An Introduction to SciPy and Pandas, thank you all for coming! As promised, here are the resources and source files from the talk.
Unsurprisingly, MadPUG has filled Bendyworks to capacity more than a couple times during meet-ups. Since we naturally want to keep growing and do not want to exclude anyone, I have sought out a new venue for MadPUG — the Madison Public Library (Central Location on West Mifflin).
Most local meet-ups never expect the need to have a Code of Conduct for their attendees and most do not. In fact, MadPUG has never had an incident occur that would indicate this is necessary which would make most beg the question “Why?”.
MadPUG is a community users’ group intended for networking, collaboration, and learning in the developer community.