Call for proposals
The Call For Proposals is closed!
PyCon is organized by the Python community and for the Python community. You're coming to the event, and that makes you part of the community. If you've done something that you think other people might be interested in, or that you think they should know about, please do consider telling us about it. We don't just want to hear from the experts or famous names - other perspectives are just as valuable, so don't let the idea that you're not expert or famous enough stop you. This is your invitation to submit talk proposal if you haven't speak at the conference before. First-time speakers talk proposals are preferred.
Where to submit your proposal
We are glad you are interested in giving a talk at PyCon SK 2018! Submit your talk proposal with short abstract and your bio. All selected speakers get complimentary ticket to the conference.
The deadline for submissions was the end of 21th January 2018. However, if you believe you have something interesting to say, please contact us via email: info@pycon.sk
Guidelines for Proposal Submission
There is no official restriction on the topic that you propose for a talk session. Talks about Python or the Python community are most likely to line up with the interests of PyCon's audience, and a key consideration that the talk selection committee will be thinking about is your talk's ability to draw an audience. You may propose more than one, but the committee will ask you to choose only one talk if more than one of your proposals is accepted.
Talks
Most talks are 30 minutes long, but we do offer a limited number of 45-minute slots for important topics that promise to benefit from a more extensive treatment.
Workshops
As with the talks, we are looking for tutorials that can grow this community at any level! We aim for tutorials that will advance Python, advance this community, and shape the future. As tutorials are longer than talks and are in an interactive classroom-like setting, they require much more preparation.