Visit our site to listen to past episodes, support the show, join our community, and sign up for our mailing list. Summary Ian Ozsvald and Emlyn Clay are co-chairs of the London chapter of the PyData organization. In this episode we talked to them about their experience managing the PyData conference and meetup, what the PyData organization does, and their thoughts on using Python for data analytics in their work. Brief Introduction Hello and welcome to Podcast.__init__, the podcast about Python and the people who make it great. Subscribe on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn or RSS Follow us on Twitter or Google+ Give us feedback! Leave a review on iTunes, Tweet to us, send us an email or leave us a message on Google+ Join our community! Visit discourse.pythonpodcast.com for your opportunity to find out about upcoming guests, suggest questions, and propose show ideas. I would like to thank everyone who has donated to the show. Your contributions help us make the show sustainable. For details on how to support the show you can visit our site at pythonpodcast.com Linode is sponsoring us this week. Check them out at linode.com/podcastinit and get a $20 credit to try out their fast and reliable Linux virtual servers for your next project I would also like to thank Hired, a job marketplace for developers and designers, for sponsoring this episode of Podcast.__init__. Use the link hired.com/podcastinit to double your signing bonus. Your hosts as usual are Tobias Macey and Chris Patti Today we are interviewing Ian Ozsvald and Emlyn Clay about their work with PyData London, a group within the PyData organization. PyData London represents the largest Python group in London at ~2850 members, they hold regular monthly meetups for ~200 members at AHL near Bank and a yearly conference for around ~300 members. Last year, they and their sponsors raised over £26,000 to sponsor the development of core numerical libraries in Python. Use the promo code podcastinit20 to get a $20 credit when you sign up! On Hired software engineers & designers can get 5+ interview requests in a week and each offer has salary and equity upfront. With full time and contract opportunities available, users can view the offers and accept or reject them before talking to any company. Work with over 2,500 companies from startups to large public companies hailing from 12 major tech hubs in North America and Europe. Hired is totally free for users and If you get a job you’ll get a $2,000 “thank you” bonus. If you use our special link to signup, then that bonus will double to $4,000 when you accept a job. If you’re not looking for a job but know someone who is, you can refer them to Hired and get a $1,337 bonus when they accept a job. Interview Introductions How did you get introduced to Python? – Chris What is the PyData organization, how does PyData London fit into it and what is your relationship with it? – Tobias In what ways does a PyData conference differ from a PyCon? – Tobias Does PyData do anything in particular to encourage users from disciplines that might not be aware of how much our community has to offer to choose the Python suite of data analysis tools? – Chris You have both spent a good portion of your careers using Python for working with and analyzing data from various domains. How has that experience evolved over the past several years as newer tools have become available? – Tobias For someone who is just getting started in the data analytics space, what advice can you give? – Tobias How can conferences like PyData help strengthen the bonds and synergies between the Python software community and the sciences? – Chris There are a number of different subtopics within the blanket categorization of data science. Is it difficult to balance the subject matter in PyData conferences and meetups to keep members of the audience from being alienated? – Tobias Data science is a young field and we’ve yet to see lots of examples of the successful use of data. How are London-based companies using data with Python? – Ian Is there a Python data science library you think needs a little love? – Emlyn Keep In Touch Ian Blog Twitter Emlyn Twitter Picks Tobias xcape Keybase Filesystem Chris The Player of Games Undertale The Big Short Ian Seaborn: Python visualisation tool Mastering Predictive Analytics with R: Rui Miguel Forte Allergect Rhinitis research using ML London Unreal City Audio Tour Emlyn ipython nbconvert –template flag Damian Avila’s Blog post on making slides with iPython Notebook The intro and outro music is from Requiem for a Fish The Freak Fandango Orchestra / CC BY-SA