He was a great man, and he will be missed in many communities around the web. I was always in awe of his code, including some of the best refactors of Django.
It's important to take a moment to remember and pay respect when we lose a community member, but as you're expressing here, it is also important to look around and recognize the talent and kindness around us that we can still learn from.
[1] https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/internals/committers/#...
http://storify.com/adrianholovaty/malcolm-tredinnick-memoria...
very sorry for his friends, family, and the community.
Depressing news -- RIP Malcolm.
Unfortunately I've never had a chance to meet him, and I haven't really been following the happenings in Django-world for a long time now, but I still felt really saddened seeing the news. Condolences to friends and family.
Thank you for writing this comment - if I could, I would give you one hundred up votes for it. :(
I wrote a remembrance here: http://www.holovaty.com/writing/malcolm/
When I ran the first DjangoCon back in 2008 I was just a 23 year old programmer. New to everything. All the people there seemed like superheroes to me. I was honoured to have met Malcolm and to listen to him speak. He was a massive inspiration to me.
Malcolm worked incredibly hard for the Django community and we're all better off because of the commitment he made.
Thanks for being an awesome guy, for your dedication and for your knowledge. We'll all miss you :(
During one two hours conversation at KiwiPycon, he left the strong impression of being one who can argue very convincingly from both side. He made it clear, again and again, that as engineers, there is "no camp" for us to choose. Rather we should all be a bit more patient and make careful "case-by-case" decisions.
Later that day (IIRC), Cal Henderson gave his "Why I Hate Django" keynote, and at some point my picture showed up in a slide: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6Fr65PFqfk#t=53m10s
"Don't make Malcolm cry" :)
Sorry to hear he's gone. My condolences to his family and friends. RIP Malcolm.