Django Under the Hood 2016 Highlights

Videos from Django Under the Hood 2016 are up
– check ’em out!
As usual, the conference was amazing and the content was fantastic.
I really enjoyed all the talks, and they’re all worth your time to talk. Three
in particular stood out to me as exceptional highlights:

  1. Ana’s talk on Testing in Django is the single best talk on effective testing
    of Django apps I’ve ever seen. I really like her technique of explaining
    Django’s testing APIs by looking at how they changed over time: it does a
    great job of explaining what problems particular APIs solve, and why you’d
    use them. Most testing talks don’t do a great job talking about use cases;
    Ana’s breaks the mold.

    Ana’s talk also taught me about the concept of Mutation Testing and
    mutpy — concept and a tool
    that were new to me, and that I’m excited to try out.

  2. Idan’s talk on the JavaScript world was precisely the kind of “Javascript for
    Python people” that I needed to see. Like a lot of people, I find the pace of
    change in the JavaScript community to be overwhelming, and it’s been hard
    to figure out what to focus on. Idan’s overview has helped me figure out
    what I want to focus my attention on.

  3. Nadia’s talk about OSS funding covered a topic close to my heart, and this
    she gets right to the heart of the issue. (See also her white paper, Roads and Bridges: The Unseen Labor Behind Our Digital Infrastructure.)

    It’s becoming clear that the only way we can really make open source
    sustainable and non-exploitative is to figure out ways of paying people for
    their work, but the tactics are complicated. Nadia’s work highlights a path
    forward, and inspired me with some concrete ideas to improve the situation
    in the Django community.