@Ffisegydd I've almost finished integrating all the bar charts and stuff into real-reports now... I'll show you one when it's finished, so you can see your handy work :)
I've only skimmed LPTHW, but I've seen a lot of questions from people using it, and I'm not much of a fan. The problems seem to emphasize the wrong things.
@DSM I've seen so many questions on SO about various "learning books", and a lot of them, I just end up thinking, "where is the author trying to get you to go with this - it makes no sense gawd dammit!"
@Nathvi: that's hard to answer in the abstract. But there are lots of things you can learn from a given problem -- syntax, functions, patterns, idioms -- and I'm not convinced that students using that work are necessarily picking up what they're supposed to. But since I only see the subsample of people who ask questions on SO, there's a big selection bias. (That said, I'd never have made it through LPTHW.)
But yeah, awesome stuff in Python? I once wrote a data analysis GUI program that did automated filtering of high frequency components for a 3rd year Physics project.
I've covered the gamut from building planets to infecting schoolchildren with the flu. On the bright side, I gave them days off, so it was probably a wash.
I didn't mind Obj-C that much, although I admit I haven't done much with it since I stopped getting the academic discount on Apple purchases and my macbook gave up the ghost.
Update: Many thanks to those who volunteered; we'll be in touch by email in the next week or so. We had far more volunteers than mentor spots available, but your generosity and interest are appreciated; we hope to create more opportunities to mentor in the future.
It'll be interesting to see if they publish how many male/female volunteers they had
@JonClements: even if women volunteered at a significantly higher rate it wouldn't surprise me if there were more men than women given the numbers involved. Actually, I'd be a little surprised if that weren't the case, come to think of it.
The whole thing it's trying to do ie. get more females into the industry is kind of the same thing that is it down fall - ie, the experienced developers that'd make experienced mentors are more likely to be male
@DSM in house - they managed 15 males/1 female mentor