Announcing our full program, and last call for hotel rooms
Hello Pythonistas!
We're very excited to share the full list of talks for this year's North Bay Python, which is happening in Petaluma on June 29th and 30th.
This year, we have 17 presentations on subjects ranging from open social media, robotics, testing, open source sustainability, BASIC, and far more! Our presenters are visiting from across the Bay Area, and from places slightly further afield including southern California and also Canada and Australia.
Check out the list of talks at the end of this email, and then make sure you buy your ticket right away so that you don't miss out on hearing them from the comfort of our fantastic barn location.
Also, our friends at the Hotel Petaluma still have rooms set aside for North Bay Python attendees. If you'd like to stay in Petaluma for the weekend, you can reserve your rooms from our official block before May 27th.
Reservations are cancellable until just before the conference.
Without further ado, here's the full list of talks:
- Quantifying Nebraska by Adam Harvey
- Exploring the intersection of humanity and technology in a hedonistic context with cocktail robotics by Christine Story and Rich Gibson
- What Python Can Learn From Other Languages by Noah Kantrowitz
- Boxes Full of Python: Understanding ActivityPub and the Open Web by Philip James
- Bridges, or Benefits of Connecting Our Communities by Mario Munoz
- Nightmare on LLM Street: The Perils and Paradoxes of Knowing Your Foe by Paris Buttfield-Addison
- What Not To Document And Why by Margaret Fero
- marimo: an open-source reactive notebook for Python by Akshay Agrawal
- In the 1980s and earlier, Python used to be BASIC. Could BASIC possibly be an alternative or a companion to Python today? by Phil Beffrey
- WASM all the way down by Christopher Swenson
- Magical (or not) GraphQL by David Lord
- The Perfect Python Project by Glyph
- Hypothesis Levels Up: codegen, observability, fault localization, and a black-magic backend by Zac Hatfield-Dodds
- Mock It Till You Make It: How to Verify Your External Mocks Without Ever Leaving Unittest by Liz Acosta
- A visual exploration of vectors by Pamela Fox
- How to optimize Postgres queries for Python developers by Lukas Fittl
- To rewrite or not to rewrite: an OSS community journey in the LLMiverse by Tilde Thurium
We’ll have our full schedule ready in the coming weeks.
Tickets for North Bay Python are limited to 150 in total, and are on sale now at https://pretix.northbaypython.org/nbpy/nbpy-2024/ — get in before they sell out!
We hope you're as excited by our list of talks as we are!
--Chris and the North Bay Python team