If you'd like to read about the recent success of a summer project
involving Django, read on.

I've been playing with django in my spare time for a couple years.
I've written a simple blog app, and have half-finished a few sizeable
apps, one of which will be put on a vps by the end of the semester.

This past summer, my fiance worked in an REU to develop an online
learning module for a graduate course. I promised to help her a bit
with the details if she chose to use Django. By the end of the 8 week
summer project, all the code and templates had been written,
documented, tested, and debugged, and most of the content was in
place. The first 2-3 weeks were spent learning the content of the
course, and the last week was spent installing everything on her
supervisor's machine and teaching her how to create the rest of the
content. (MySQL on windows can be annoying.) So, about 20 hours per
week times about 4 weeks produces a debugged cross-platform webapp.

Anyway, my fiance just got an email from the supervisor to say that
the learning module was recently used in the course, and just about
everybody loved it. There were no technical difficulties, the
professor was impressed, and the TA said it would be a good tool
throughout the class.

Thank you, Django!
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