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Virtual Merit Badges
Out of the latest Expedite Day comes a system for awarding badges...
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4 Python Web Frameworks Compared
Six Feet Up organized IndyPy's Python Web Shootout, where 4 companies showed off 4 Python frameworks through the demo of a ToDo app developed in Bottle, Django, Flask and Pyramid.
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Python Django Training Course Now Available
We’ve taken the challenge of finding well-trained Python developers into our own hands. Clayton and I will be teaching 5-day immersive trainings on Python and Django at Eleven Fifty in Carmel, Indiana.
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Django CMS vs Plone
At Six Feet Up, we have extensive experience with both Plone and Django CMS. In this post, I am exploring when you might want to use Django CMS and when Plone might be a better fit...
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Getting Started with Django
Where to go to start with Django; useful tips; pros and cons; online references, and more...
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Kick Start your Django/Plone Buildout with PyCharm
PyCharm has great features, such as a Debugger, code completion, syntax highlighting and code formatting for Buildout configuration files. Here are several tips to help you get going...
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Django 1.11 to Django 3.1 Upgrade
Six Feet Up assisted with in a major upgrade to the Kuehne + Nagel application going from Django 1.11 to Django 3.1...
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Projects
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Hacking Django Channels for Fun (and Profit)
LoudSwarm by Six Feet Up, a Django-based virtual event platform, has always supported Slack for instant, in-app text communication. In addition to Slack, clients were requesting Discord integration, so Six Feet Up’s expert team of developers found a solution.
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Serverless Django: Exploring the State of the Art on AWS
As deployment options for web apps have multiplied in the past few years, AWS Lambda continues to stand out as a powerful, simple way to run a web app with minimal maintenance and cost — if there is low traffic.
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How to Leapfrog a Massive Django/Python Upgrade Successfully
Migrating from Django 1.7 to 3.1 is no small task. Besides having to deal with the upgrade of Django itself, you shouldn't forget that an upgrade like this implies an upgrade from Python 2 to 3 as well.
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