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Python 3.13 time.time() on Windows now has a resolution of *238 ns* instead of *15.6 ms*: it's 65 500x more accurate! The feature was requested 11 years ago (2013)! Better late than never 😉 github.com/python/cpython/pull

Extremely excited to share my team at NVIDIA is hiring for a full time role working on ✨ open source Python packaging projects ✨ like Warehouse, pip, and more!

If you are or know someone excited about open source Python development, especially focusing on open source packaging projects, please take a look! And if you have any questions for me, please reach out.

Please boost for spread!

nvidia.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/e

#python #opensource #getfedihired #fedijobs

When you say #PiDay, I hear #PyDay. Let's celebrate this day with a special episode with a special guest: sitting Steering Council member and #Python core developer, Emily Morehouse-Valcarcel!

We're talking about the Steering Council, progress bars, least and most favorite parts of Python, and of course, assignment expressions.

I'd use a walrus emoji, but the best we've got is a tuskless seal! 🦭 There's no anonymous crow either...

podcasters.spotify.com/pod/sho

@nedbat @cnx Ned is trying to start a blue dress / gold dress war on Mastodon 😛

@simon I think you dropped a Z from the format string (or, equivalently, included an extra one in the output).

@sourcenouveau Is this independent of using type hints? My functions returning containers usually return abstract protocol types, so `f() -> Iterator[T]` for generator type things and `f() -> Iterable[T]` for iterable type things (or `Sequence` or `MutableSequence` or whatever).

I don't think a type checker is going to stop you from iterating over it twice, though, so I guess you still have to know the signature.

I logged on to twitter for the first time in ages because I wanted to contact someone whose preferred contact method was twitter DMs, and twitter suggested that I "interact with [my] timeline more" to help them learn that I'm human.

With the current state of twitter, I'm not sure that "likes to interact with this website" is a particularly common trait among humans...

On the plus side, I suppose this means I'll have a backup motherboard if the new one ever goes out. Maybe I should get a backup CPU as well to reduce downtime.

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Hmm.. My personal "local-only" server went down a few days ago, I think because the MB died (first it was starting and showing red for the "CPU" and "DRAM" LEDs, then it stopped booting entirely).

It's still under warranty, but when I do an RMA from ASRock I get an internal server error 500. I suspect that even when I finally get them to accept the RMA, it will be some time (weeks?) before I get a new motherboard. I could have a new motherboard from MicroCenter for $120 this evening, so I guess I'll just do that.

@cnx Yeah I know someone who gave them an email address to download something once. It was not a recommended experience.

I'm looking for additional suitable reviewers for the Journal of Open Source Software (@joss) submission:

State-Averaged Orbital-Optimized VQE: A quantum algorithm for the democratic description of ground and excited electronic states

Anybody able to review this submission for JOSS, or suggest a reviewer? The review is mostly done but needs an additional reviewer to step up to get it over the finish line.

github.com/openjournals/joss-r

@nedbat @webology I did learn that if you sign up for an Azure cloud account, Azure PMs will aggressively "follow up" with you immediately and also for weeks afterwards.

@nedbat @webology I had the same thing happen a few years ago, and this was back in the days where MS was giving out some free licenses or Azure machines or something to core devs.

I think I eventually gave up. Nowadays I usually don't spend my time on Windows-only or Mac-only bugs since I usually can't reproduce them easily enough to fix them.

@simon Statements referenced *and* establishing notability? Pretty sure this is going to be a cut above most new article submissions.

@gaborbernat @hugovk The version before 20.x was 16.x, though. The whole version history is actually pretty weird: pypi.org/project/virtualenv/#h

It jumps from 1.x to 12.x... in 2014, then it looks mostly like semver until 2020 when it jumps to 20.x and holds there.

I bet the joke was on them when they got to the afterlife and the Shabti figurines kept drawing portraits of them with extra fingers...

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So apparently AIs have been taking human jobs for almost 5000 years now:

> Another probable reason for the decline, and eventual end, of retainer sacrifices is the creation of shabti-figures. Shabti-figures were mummy-shaped figurines, meant to replace retainer sacrifices; "... the responsibility for carrying out tasks on behalf of the deceased was transferred to a special kind of funerary statuette, known as a shabti-figure".[2] These shabti-figures were believed to carry out a wide variety of tasks, including everything from cultivating fields, to irrigating canals, to serving the deceased.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_

Do you work in a university? If so, request that they run a Tor node.

It's a good thing to do.

toruniversity.eff.org/

#censorship #privacy #tor

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