Second half of the Tasmanian trip started with dinner with my old colleague Emeritus Professor Peter Boyce, a really wonderful night with a wide-ranging discussion with a bit of a concentration on the weirder parts of the former east European governments in less democratic days. It dove-tailed well with
caseopaya and I continuing strongly with our duolingo lessons, even if it has meant missing some CAE classes. Whilst not a headline, my favourite talk of the the final day of OSDC was Paul Wayper's presentation (primarily) on logging. One the last day took the M.V. Emmalisa for a lunch-time trip which is excellent value.
Returned from Tasmania in time for Halloween, where local kids adopt the completely wrong astronomical ritual under the influence of American cultural imperialism. We sent them away with threats that we would feed them to our rats. I spoke the following day at the Progressive Atheists Conference on Secularism in the Modern World. The real keynotes however were presentations by Bangladeshi 'bloggers who are having a fairly rough time. The following day convened The Philosophy Forum where James Fodor spoke on peer disagreement.
On the topic of classes, first day of three of Linux and HPC courses for RMIT and UniMelb students was held today. Exhausting as usual, but also with good feedback and a couple of really switched on individuals who wanted to push Python down the parallel path. Will be running classes tomorrow as well, even it is supposed to be a public holiday for horse torture. Next week will be the same run of courses at La Trobe University. Appropriately, this Wednesday I will be speaking at Linux Users of Victoria on parallel programming (having just completely a security and module upgrade to the site, hopefully nothing is too broken).
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Returned from Tasmania in time for Halloween, where local kids adopt the completely wrong astronomical ritual under the influence of American cultural imperialism. We sent them away with threats that we would feed them to our rats. I spoke the following day at the Progressive Atheists Conference on Secularism in the Modern World. The real keynotes however were presentations by Bangladeshi 'bloggers who are having a fairly rough time. The following day convened The Philosophy Forum where James Fodor spoke on peer disagreement.
On the topic of classes, first day of three of Linux and HPC courses for RMIT and UniMelb students was held today. Exhausting as usual, but also with good feedback and a couple of really switched on individuals who wanted to push Python down the parallel path. Will be running classes tomorrow as well, even it is supposed to be a public holiday for horse torture. Next week will be the same run of courses at La Trobe University. Appropriately, this Wednesday I will be speaking at Linux Users of Victoria on parallel programming (having just completely a security and module upgrade to the site, hopefully nothing is too broken).