On Friday, February 1, 2013 12:09:04 AM UTC-5, Chris Angelico wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 1, 2013 at 4:00 PM, Steven D'Aprano
>
> wrote:
>
> > dg.google.gro...@thesamovar.net wrote:
>
> >
>
> >> If you could take one minute to make sure you
>
> >> are signed in to your Google+ account
>
> >
>
> >
On Fri, Feb 1, 2013 at 4:00 PM, Steven D'Aprano
wrote:
> dg.google.gro...@thesamovar.net wrote:
>
>> If you could take one minute to make sure you
>> are signed in to your Google+ account
>
> Which Google+ account would that be? I have so few.
>
It's a thing non-nerds do, Steven. You wouldn't und
dg.google.gro...@thesamovar.net wrote:
> If you could take one minute to make sure you
> are signed in to your Google+ account
Which Google+ account would that be? I have so few.
--
Steven
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thursday, January 31, 2013 10:06:44 PM UTC-5, Terry Reedy wrote:
> On 1/31/2013 8:05 PM, dg.google.gro...@thesamovar.net wrote:
> > Here's the link to the article:
> > http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Brian_simulator
>
> 'Brian' is obviously a play on 'brain', with two letters transposed. Bu
On 1/31/2013 8:05 PM, dg.google.gro...@thesamovar.net wrote:
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 whic
On Fri, Feb 1, 2013 at 12:05 PM, wrote:
> "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! :)
Ah, I don't need to read it. You're simulating a brain; the rest is
mere appendix!
(couldn't res
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
neuroscie