Archive for January, 2006

TurboGears and Selenium

Saturday, January 28th, 2006

Grig Gheorghiu wrote some days ago about Useful tools for writing Selenium tests.
Selenium is a fantastic tool for running tests within your webbrowser in a cross-platform and cross-browser way. But as Grig wrote in his post, hand writing test cases can be pretty tiresome.
This situation will probably change once the much expected Selenium-IDE is […]

CC license

Tuesday, January 17th, 2006

I have updated the TG journey illustration to clarify the type of CC license for it.
The graph it’s under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License, basically you can use it as you like as long as you remember to mention the author - that’s me =)
You can get the ‘original’ Illustrator file (CS […]

A http request’s journey through the TG stack

Monday, January 16th, 2006

A couple of days ago Stefane Fermigier posted a nice graph mapping the dependencies between different webframeworks and Python packages.
I have a week spot for infographics, and Stefane’s post triggered the idea of doing an illustration of the journey of a http request through the TurboGears application stack. You can see the result […]

Online courses

Saturday, January 7th, 2006

Mark Ramm invited me recently to contribute to his fine initiative of providing TurboGears related courses.
This is something I will love to do and because I already had planned to spend time on an application to demo at LinuxForum,
It occur to me that I could combine the two activities by using the demo as the […]

Talking about TurboGears

Thursday, January 5th, 2006

In March I’m going to give a talk at the ‘LinuxForum‘ conference about TurboGears.
The “LinuxForum” is a yearly Open Source conference in Copenhagen, Denmark.
This venue has been growing steadily for the last nine years, so I’m a bit unsure about the type of audience I’ll get. There use to be ponytails and debian t-shirts […]