From rkleeman at energoncube.net Thu Jul 9 16:27:18 2009 From: rkleeman at energoncube.net (Bob Kleemann) Date: Thu, 9 Jul 2009 16:27:18 -0700 Subject: [San-Diego-pm] Invitation to SD Perl Mongers Members (fwd) Message-ID: <20090709232718.GC16828@energoncube.net> For anyone that may be interested. ----- Forwarded message from Liam Lively ----- Technical Training Resources will be hosting a free bi-monthly networking event for IT professionals on July 22, 2009 from 5:30pm - 7:30pm. All IT professionals in the San Diego area are invited to come for mingling, refreshments, and short presentations on issues that face the IT community.  RSVP for the event by calling 858-689-2773 or by completing our online form at: http://www.technicaltrainingresources.com/rsvp.php We look forward to seeing you. Best Regards, Liam Lively, Technical Instructor Technical Training Resources 6920 Miramar Road, Suite 105 San Diego, CA 92121 858.689.2773 858.689.2776 FAX From rkleeman at energoncube.net Wed Jul 15 15:11:07 2009 From: rkleeman at energoncube.net (Bob Kleemann) Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 15:11:07 -0700 Subject: [San-Diego-pm] Meeting Tomorrow! Message-ID: <20090715221106.GA27499@energoncube.net> Perl Mongers, Our normal monthly meeting is taking place at our normal time and place, the Sorrento Vally Food Court at 7 PM. We'll do our normal monthly activity of asking and answering questions, as well as chatting about life, the universe, and everything. Next month though should be a bit different. More on that tomorrow evening and in the coming weeks. I look forward to seeing everyone there. From saaib at ciberlinux.net Wed Jul 15 15:20:46 2009 From: saaib at ciberlinux.net (Urivan Flores) Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2009 14:20:46 -0800 Subject: [San-Diego-pm] Meeting Tomorrow! In-Reply-To: <20090715221106.GA27499@energoncube.net> References: <20090715221106.GA27499@energoncube.net> Message-ID: <20090715221958.M2514@ciberlinux.net> On Wed, 15 Jul 2009 15:11:07 -0700, Bob Kleemann wrote > Perl Mongers, > > Our normal monthly meeting is taking place at our normal time and > place, the Sorrento Vally Food Court at 7 PM. We'll do our normal Looking forward to see everyone there! Regards, -- Urivan Flores-Saaib saaib at ciberlinux.net (858) 431-9734 From chris at chrisgrau.com Fri Jul 17 17:06:08 2009 From: chris at chrisgrau.com (Chris Grau) Date: Fri, 17 Jul 2009 17:06:08 -0700 Subject: [San-Diego-pm] July 2009 Meeting Recap Message-ID: <20090718000608.GA4489@chrisgrau.com> =head1 NAME SanDiego::Meeting::Social - Social gathering of the San Diego Perl Mongers =head1 DATE Thursday, 16 July 2009, 19:00 - 21:45 =head1 LOCATION Scranton Food Court, San Diego (Sorrento Valley), Calif., USA =head1 DESCRIPTION This is a simple meeting recap, conveniently written in pod so everyone can read it in whatever format they prefer. If you lack an appropriate formatter, well, you can always write one. As an added bonus, if you're using a decent MUA *cough*Mutt*cough*, a formatter is only a few keystrokes away: macro pager ,pd "pod2text" =head1 ATTENDEES In no particular order. =over =item Bob Our de facto fearless leader (no one else wants the job). =item Bob Who, I believe, attended his first meeting (if I'm mistaken, sorry about that, Bob). He's currently doing some contract work on embedded systems. =item Bob ... er, George Who, we're not supposed to say, has a ... hey, George, what are you doing here? What is that you have in your hand ... Ow! =item Manny Who is marketing's bitch. =item Chris Who wrote the notes you are currently reading. =back Qualcomm Ratio = 1:5 =head1 TOPICS =head2 Stunt Barbie Yes, I said Stunt Barbie. And, like anyone worth talking about, she has a web site[1]. What, besides sounding cool, does this have to do with Perl? Well, those of you who met Randal Schwartz at Stone know what I'm talking about. Those of you who didn't, well, you know as much as I do. [1] L =head2 Not Exactly What is Meant by "Software Bloat" An important safety tip for those of you using MySQL with InnoDB storage engine. The C file, where the actual table data is stored, can only grow. For example, let's say one database has a 100 MiB C file. This file contains the data for all of the tables in the database. All of the data is removed, using C statements. Then, all of the data is reloaded. This results in a 200 MiB C file. Obviously this is a rather contrived example. However, it's useful to know if running a database with a lot of churn. That is, rows may be added or deleted with some frequency, which may happen in something like a web session table. =head2 Git 'er Done Chris has proudly proclaimed that he will attempt to switch one of his big projects at work from CVS to Git. He gave a handful of high level reasons for this: =over =item * It's a distributed version control system. =item * Atomic commits. =item * Better branching and merging. =item * Easy to extend by writing scripts called C. He also promised a future demo of this, using the example in I. =item * He's already supporting customers who use it. =back There are, of course, lots of features available in Git, which Chris will figure out as he uses it and designs work flows around it with his team. =head2 It May Be PHP, but You Can Still Control it with Perl George maintains a personal knowledge base using MediaWiki. Yes, we were sure to give him crap about using PHP-based wiki software (writes the guy who uses WordPress for his blog). George would like to generate a list of something-or-other and automatically populate a section on one of his wiki pages. He was referred to the C[2] module on the CPAN. Chris has some code he's written at work that subclasses this module's precursor, C, to operate on the MediaWiki-based wikis on the internal network. [2] L =head2 Branches? We Don't Need No Stinkin' Branches! During the meeting, Manny exclaimed that the code he had contributed to the Linux Mint project had been broken. Apparently, something was done between when he submitted it and it was released. An important safety tip resulted. When performing C transfers with a pass-phrase-less private key, make sure said private key does not, in fact, have a pass-phrase. The interesting bit, however, was learning that Linux Mint does not use source control. No, really, they don't. Remember kids, real life doesn't have save points; version control for your files is about as close as it gets. =head1 NEXT MEETING Thursday, 20 August 2009, 19:00 - 21:00 We have a special treat in store for our next meeting. Daniel has graciously volunteered to present a project of his, which he described on the list back in June: L The meeting will be held at the offices of DrJays.com: 9180 Camino Santa Fe San Diego, CA 92121 L L =cut -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available URL: