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Python IT

Two Python Core Developers Remain in Ukraine (businessinsider.com) 72

Business Insider reports: Serhiy Storchaka, a Ukrainian developer, is the second-most prolific recent contributor to Python and tenth-most prolific of all time, according to Lukasz Langa, the Python Software Foundation's developer in residence, based in Poznan, Poland... Storchaka faced an impossible choice as Russia invaded his country. Like many young male programmers in Ukraine, he decided to stay....

Storchaka lives outside of Konotop, a city in northeastern Ukraine which is occupied by Russian forces. He tweeted on February 26, "Russian tanks were on the road 2km from my house, and Russian armored vehicles were passing by my windows. Most likely, I will find myself in the occupied zone, where the law does not apply...."

Insider was unable to contact Storchaka, but spoke with Langa... [A]s the military crisis worsened on Friday and over the weekend, the Python developer community rallied to help Storchaka's younger family members. Communicating with Storchaka's family through Google Translate, Langa managed to secure temporary housing for Storchaka's niece and best friend, aged 11. They crossed the border to Poland via bus with their mother, and met Langa, who drove over 300km to Warsaw to pick up keys and secure basic necessities for the family.

"Two little 11-year-old girls (my niece and her best friend) are now safe thanks to @llanga," Storchaka tweeted last Monday, adding "My sister and I are immensely grateful." (He'd been especially worried because their town was near one of Ukraine's nuclear power plants, "a strategic target".)

Business Insider points out Storchaka is just one of many Python core developers from Ukraine, and one of many Ukrainians working in its tech sector. Andrew Svetlov, another influential Python developer who specializes in asynchronous networking support, also remains in Ukraine.... Svetlov is in Kyiv, where Russian troops have surrounded the city....

"Neither of them wanted to leave their country, even in the face of the great risk this poses for them," Langa told Insider.

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Two Python Core Developers Remain in Ukraine

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  • by dunkelfalke ( 91624 ) on Monday March 07, 2022 @04:02AM (#62332689)

    I doubt it. Had to stay due to general conscription. Adult males are not allowed to leave the country.

    • Many people are deciding to stay. About 66000 returned from abroad to fight.
    • by jd ( 1658 )

      People do lots of things they're not allowed to do, and a programmer can be assumed to be smart enough to understand that conscription will produce a lost generation.

      Besides which, the invasion has been expected for several months. Conscription is a relatively new addition. You can't blame poor planning on the laws.

      There are many things you can blame on the laws, and there will be some men who are now trapped who couldn't leave because of those laws. The British government seems to have a fondness for doing

    • by caseih ( 160668 )

      Your words are an insult to the thousands of volunteers who are defending their very freedom and who will likely die rather than submit to a dictator--the same dictator who is rounding up his own citizens for daring to protest war. This is the love of freedom that used to ring in America and other western countries. This is a huge wake-up call to all of us that our freedoms are not to be taken for granted, and to put our petty differences into perspective. I am in awe of these two programmers, and the ma

    • I doubt it. Had to stay due to general conscription. Adult males are not allowed to leave the country.

      Completely wrong.

      1) If an adult male really wants to leave they can get out. There's lots of fighting aged males among the refugees.

      2) Ukraine is trying to restrict citizens from leaving. His city is occupied by the Russians who would be thrilled if potential insurgents fled elsewhere. Though I don't know if his city is a "your're allowed to evacuate to Russia" city or a "you'll get shot if you try to leave" city.

      3) The ban stops them from leaving the country, NOT from leaving their particular city. I know

  • It is also known as the bread truck scenario, bus problem, beer truck scenario, lottery factor, truck factor, bus/truck number, or lorry factor. Now we can add Putin factor to the list. Kidding aside, my deepest respect to the Ukrainian people, they're putting up one hell of a fight!
  • Maybe try Tinder. Or Craigslist.

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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