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Showing posts from May, 2026

Welcome Back, NVIDIA: Visionary Sponsor of PyCon US 2026

NVIDIA is excited to once again support PyCon US 2026 as a Visionary Sponsor , and to sponsor the Future of AI with Python Conference Track . Python is a “first-class” language at NVIDIA CUDA, and NVIDIA is committed to bringing our technology to Python developers in close alignment with C++ upon new releases of our hardware. We’re also happy to announce the general availability of CUDA Python 1.0 . NVIDIA’s commitment to Python goes well beyond just our own tech stack. NVIDIA’s Python engineers contribute across a broad swath of the Python ecosystem, from the core interpreter itself, to packaging and PyPI, to the Python community at large. NVIDIA is inspired by the energy of, and privileged to collaborate with, people across the open source Python community. Since PyCon last year, NVIDIA Pythonistas – in collaboration with many others in the Python community – have made great progress on the evolution of various packaging standards, including working with community partners on the imp...

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sprints!

Who is at the sprints? Sprints at PyCon US are organized by the attendees. The conference provides the space with tables, power strips, Internet connectivity, and, for the first two days, catered lunches. The attendees band together to work on their open-source and community projects of choice. You can expect bigger projects like CPython, Django, Flask, or BeeWare, to have their own dedicated rooms to hack on their stuff. Smaller projects either group together topically or just join a random friendly room with empty seats. You’ll find project maintainers, seasoned contributors, community organizers, and first-time contributors alike. Everybody’s welcome! Which project should I join for sprints? This is a question worth answering before coming. Sprints work best for contributors who are already users of a given project. If you know a project like, say, CPython or Django well enough, you probably stumbled upon a bug in that software in the past. Maybe you looked into how some internals o...

Asking the Key Questions: Q&A with the PyCon US 2026 keynote speaker Pablo Galindo Salgado

  This is a blog series where we're asking each of our PyConUS 2026 keynote speakers about their journey into tech, how excited they are for PyconUS and any tips they can provide for an awesome conference experience! Thank you Pablo for this interview! You can learn more about Pablo's keynote on the PyConUS Keynote Speakers page and you can also attend Pablo Galindo Salgado s meet and greet at the PSF Booth in the Expo Hall on Saturday May 16 after Pablo's keynote. How did you get started in tech/Python? Did you have a friend or a mentor that helped you? I got into tech through the back door: as part of my Physics studies, needing to write code to run simulations and process data. The simulations themselves were in Fortran 77 and C++ but for the rest I tried a bunch of languages before landing on Python, but Python had something the others didn't: it was genuinely fun. And then I discovered the community, and that was it. I didn't have a single mentor so much as a...

Asking the Key Questions: Q&A with the PyCon US 2026 keynote speaker amanda casari

  This is a blog series where we're asking each of our PyConUS 2026 keynote speakers about their journey into tech, how excited they are for PyconUS and any tips they can provide for an awesome conference experience! Thank you amanda for this interview! You can learn more about amanda's keynote on the PyConUS Keynote Speakers page and you can also attend amanda's meet and greet at the PSF Booth in the Expo Hall on Thursday May 14 during the opening reception at 5 - 6pm PT. Without giving any too many spoilers, tell us what your keynote is about? More and more these days, amanda is asking how do you make space in open source for hope. How did you get started in tech/Python? Did you have a friend or a mentor that helped you? My first time wrestling with Python was in 2009 when I was struggling to set up a webserver for a graduate student project building a microgrid testbed for a local national park. When I moved to Seattle a few years later, the local Python tech communit...