Hi everyone, There is currently a competition running that could help give Python in computational science a bit of visibility. The competition is for the most popular recently published article on the Scholarpedia website, one of which is about a Python package "Brian" for computational neuroscience simulations. If you could take one minute to make sure you are signed in to your Google+ account and click the g+1 icon near the top right of the page, it has a chance of winning the competition. Here's the link to the article:
http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Brian_simulator Full disclosure, I'm the first author of that article, and I'd be happy to win the competition too. :) More details: Scholarpedia is an alternative to wikipedia with slightly tighter control: contributions only allowed from scholars, etc. "Brain Corporation" is offering $10000 in prizes to the top 3 most popular entries published between last October and this June based on google +1 votes. It's a bit of a silly popularity contest because of this, but I still think it would be great if a Python based thing could win it. "Brian" is a package I wrote (with several others) to do simulations of spiking neural networks in Python. Read the article if you want to know more! :) Thanks all for your attention, Dan -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list