[Grok-dev] Caveman style articles
Aroldo Souza-Leite
asouzaleite at gmx.de
Wed Jan 9 09:28:44 EST 2008
Hi Mike,
I've been thinking of starting a new incarnation by molesting the world
with a Python biased, Grok friendly blog, but reluctance overwhelms me
at present. My problem is that my over-intellectualised vita (lots of
Latin and ancient Greek, no footbal (soccer) in spite of my
Brazilian/German background), added to my insufficient technical
background, makes it difficult to find the right tone for a blog that
really helps promoting Grok. Thank's a lot for the response. Let's go on
spinning.
Meanwhile, I wonder: your article (http://linuxgazette.net/115/orr.html)
doesn't mention Grok explicitly among the plethora of Python web
frameworks. Is the Grok community's ambition to make a Component
Architecture accessible to Brian by clubbing down all that grew
unpythonic in Zope a topic for you? Do you think it's enough said just
to count Grok implicitly as one of "several advanced Zope add-ons"?.
Cheers.
Aroldo.
Mike Orr wrote:
> On Jan 8, 2008 5:07 AM, Noah Gift <noah.gift at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On Jan 8, 2008, at 4:16 AM, Aroldo Souza-Leite wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Hi list,
>>>
>>> just in case somebody overlooked this article, like I almost did:
>>>
>>> http://www.oreillynet.com/onlamp/blog/2008/01/wilfz_what_i_learned_from_zope_1.html
>>>
>>>
>>> Let's call it an article written in the genuine Caveman style.
>>> Perhaps one needs to have worked as a bouncer to learn this
>>> straightforward language. Hey, Noah, can you give us a few hints?
>>>
>> While I was an undergrad, I had to take Organic Chemistry over the
>> summer, and I needed money. I got a job during day at the library in
>> the collections and development department, and at night I worked as a
>> bouncer. It was really a strange summer getting into scraps and
>> coming home covered in blood and beer at times, and then showering up
>> to work at the library, and then finally off to lab for a few
>> experiments.
>>
>> Mike Orr looks pretty tough, I think he should do a Caveman style
>> article: http://linuxgazette.net/115/orr.html I have CC'd him. I
>> think he would look good in a caveman suite.
>>
>
> Haha, I did write a kind of a caveman-style article once.
> http://linuxgazette.net/issue96/orr.html
>
> You'd have to be familiar with Linux Gazette to understand some of the
> jokes. Woomert Foonly and Frink Ooblick are a Holmes-and-Watson pair
> who solve problems with Perl one-liners. So I wrote an article about
> a Perl-Python rivalry with an uppity third character.
>
>
>>> Shouldn't the Grok site have a place with links to selected Caveman
>>> style articles like this one?
>>>
>
> A caveman page would be cool. But I don't use Grok (just Pylons), so
> it would have to be a page not limited to that. Because there's a
> larger issue of the gulf between computer geeks and, er,
> testosterone-driven guys. Sometimes I feel so out of place in
> computer groups, and wish there were more people I could share my
> other interests with.
>
> So you know about MMA and worked with Liddell, that's cool. I have a
> friend who grew up between two marine bases in North Carolina; he'd
> done aikido and karate for thirty years. When he was 15 he was a
> bouncer at a bar, and he'd have to take care of these unruly marines.
> These guys would think they're invincible, and he'd have them on the
> ground wimpering to their buddies to just leave quietly.
>
> Another Python caveman is Titus Brown (http://ivory.idyll.org/blog).
> His latest blog title is: "It's not the lines of code, dummy." He's a
> delight to hear at a talk or in person. For instance, he wrote a
> program to test web pages easily (Twill). So at the end of a talk he
> said: "Now there's no excuse for not writing tests for your web apps.
> So unless you're bigger than me, you'd better write tests by this time
> next year or I'm gonna find you and kick your ass."
>
> As for how to do it, it's part physical and part mental. The physical
> part is obvious: join a boxing class or wrestling class, run
> regularly, etc. Being in shape and well-coordinated and knowing self
> defense are valuable throughout your life, especially by keeping you
> healthier in old age. The mental part is giving yourself permission
> to be confident and cocky. This was normal all throughout history
> until the 1960s, when wimpiness became a virtue. (Radical feminism
> played a large part in this societal change.) Now things are
> pulling back because you can't suppress guys' aggressive energy
> forever. Thus the rise of MMA.
>
> I just thought of a slogan for the page. "Cavemen: putting the 'Py'
> in the face."
>
>
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