#299: Personal search engine with datasette and dogsheep

#299: Personal search engine with datasette and dogsheep

In this episode, we'll be discussing two powerful tools for data reporting and exploration: Datasette and Dogsheep. Datasette helps people take data of any shape or size, analyze and explore it, and publish it as an interactive website and accompanying API. Dogsheep is a collection of tools for personal analytics using SQLite and Datasette. Imagine a unified search engine for everything personal in your life such as twitter, photos, google docs, todoist, goodreads, and more, all in once place and outside of cloud companies. On this episode we talk with Simon Willison who created both of these projects. He's also one of the co-creators of Django and we'll discuss some early Django history!

Episoder(544)

#401: Migrating 3.8 Million Lines of Python

#401: Migrating 3.8 Million Lines of Python

At some point, you've probably migrated an app from one framework or major runtime version to another. For example, Django to Flask, Python 2 to Python 3, or even Angular to Vue.js. This can be a big ...

2 Feb 20231h

#400: Ruff - The Fast, Rust-based Python Linter

#400: Ruff - The Fast, Rust-based Python Linter

Our code quality tools (linters, test frameworks, and others) play an important role in keeping our code error free and conforming to the rules our teams have chosen. But when these tools become slugg...

25 Jan 20231h 3min

#399: Monorepos in Python

#399: Monorepos in Python

Monorepos are contrary to how many of us have been taught to use source control. To start a project or app, the first thing we do is create a git repo for it. This leads to many focused and small repo...

18 Jan 20231h 10min

#398: Imaging Black Holes with Python

#398: Imaging Black Holes with Python

The iconic and first ever image of a black hole was recently released. It took over a decade of work and is a major achievement for astronomy and broadens our understanding of the universe for all of ...

14 Jan 202358min

#397: Evaluating New Open Source Tech Panel

#397: Evaluating New Open Source Tech Panel

The beauty of open source software and libraries is that you're not stuck with a single option some vendor is offering. This is especially true when that support is poor and antiquated. Almost any cap...

5 Jan 20231h 3min

#396: AI Goes on Trial For Writing Code (crossover)

#396: AI Goes on Trial For Writing Code (crossover)

For links and very detailed show notes, please view [the original episode page](https://pythonbytes.fm/episodes/show/312/ai-goes-on-trial-for-writing- code) over on Python Bytes. Thanks for listening!

30 Des 202237min

#395: Tools for README.md Creation and Maintenance

#395: Tools for README.md Creation and Maintenance

If you maintain projects on places like GitHub, you know that having a classy readme is important and that maintaining a change log can be helpful for you and consumers of the project. It can also be ...

22 Des 20221h 13min

#394: Awesome Jupyter Libraries and Extensions in 2022

#394: Awesome Jupyter Libraries and Extensions in 2022

Jupyter is an amazing environment for exploring data and generating executable reports with Python. But there are many external tools, extensions, and libraries to make it so much better and make you ...

15 Des 20221h 2min

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