Naraio is an open source product. Naraio is similar to LAMP software, with more packages Apache, Mysql, PHP, Perl, Subversion, OpenLDAP, phpldapadmin, Trac, Ruby, openssl, openssh, and Python. It is excellent both for small and big enterprises. Naraio comes with setup script for easy configuration. Naraio is designed to be small and flexible.
.Net opening from Middle level management (4-6 yrs) to Sr. Management Levels 7+ of experience levels. Note: This is a schedule interview and not a walk-in interview on 19th Of Oct 2008, and to confirm venue please send us your updated resume ASAP.Senior Software Developers: 5-6 yrs. Responsible for coding, unit tests, code peer-reviews
Typically, each new version of the Python programming language has been gentle on users, more or less maintaining backward compatibility with previous versions. But in 2000, when Python creator Guido van Rossum announced that he was embarking on a new version of Python, he did not sugar coat his plan: Version 3.0 would not be backward-compatible. N
The python module which is given below - pyregistry is a wrapper around _winreg module. It greatly simplifies registry access, which is more complicated if _winreg is used directly. It implements readSubKeys, readValues and pathExists functions. This way you can access windows registry through python.
The open-source software community released some exciting new software this week. Ars tested the latest beta releases of Ubuntu and Fedora, the new versions of Mono and Python, and an intriguing new location-aware extension for Firefox.
Most of the interesting servers in the world are web servers. While the layout of the web pages is in HTML that a machine can handle (with some effort), the essential data in that file is meant for human to read and is rarely designed to be easily extracted by software. But there are ways.
Python developers will soon have a tough decision to make: Move to a new Python, or stay forever bound to version 2.5 or earlier. On the Sept. 30, Python 2.6 was released, and it included a multitude of new features and adjustments to help ease users into the dramatic shift that will come with Python 3.0.
Most of the computers in the world are embedded in a bewildering range of physical gadgets. There are hundreds of millions of conventional computers, including desktops, laptops, and servers of all sorts, installed world-wide; tens of billions of processors are embedded in the devices, appliances, and installations that surround us, though.