Attend the TRiRODS Meetup TRiRODS is a local meetup for iRODS users and developers in the RDU area. TRiRODS works to build a strong sense of community, to offer a space for collaboration and sharing of individual implementations of iRODS, and to further the work on a hardened version of the code. Demo TBD
Find out more »This talk is titled What is FABRIC? and will be presented by FABRIC's Anita Nikolich. Designing, building, and maintaining advanced cyberinfrastructure to support scientific use cases can be challenging. There are numerous items to learn about, and the learning can be never ending. As a community, it is important for all of us to be available to answer questions, propose new ideas, and build upon our collective knowledge. Starting in 2017 ESnet, in collaboration with the National Science Foundation, began sponsoring semi-weekly…
Find out more »Determining a Short List of Amazon Reviews using Statistical Text Analytics and Optimization Customers want to make informed purchasing decisions without a lot of effort. Online reviews can be helpful, but which reviews are worth reading? What we could say "Read these 3 reviews, they essentially contain the same information as all 4000 reviews."? Dr. Douglas Kline will present a method for selecting subsets of reviews that are similar to the set of all reviews, using document-term frequency analysis and…
Find out more »This talk will cover key considerations for replacing a bespoke or completely manual process for handling database migrations with a new process built around Alembic or Django migrations. Jeff will also show a few specific tricks he has collected for Alembic to support his current project. The talk will not replace the Alembic or Django tutorials. Jeff Trawick has been learning and enjoying Python for about eight years, using it to develop web applications, web scrapers, and other software. He…
Find out more »The National Consortium for Data Science (NCDS) will host a networking event for students from around North Carolina interested in careers in analytics and data science. The event will be held at the Sheraton Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill, NC. NCDS members and other employers who attend the networking event will have the chance to interact with and potentially recruit top-tier analytics and data science talent. ** Please contact us at info@datascienceconsortium.org if you'd like to have a booth to meet with…
Find out more »You may already know how to automate orchestration in Chameleon using Jupyter Notebooks, but are you ready to take it to the next level by cutting down the time required to set up the lab environment? Ansible allows users to design and quickly deploy reproducible experiments with little human intervention. The orchestration steps can be tested without needing to reserve the lab resources. This webinar will showcase how to create an ansible playbook that can be customized to run any…
Find out more »TRiRODS is a local meetup for iRODS users and developers in the RDU area. TRiRODS works to build a strong sense of community, to offer a space for collaboration and sharing of individual implementations of iRODS, and to further the work on a hardened version of the code. iRODS Policy Composition: Principles and Practice By Jason Coposky, iRODS Consortium Wednesday, February 19, 2020 Historically a single static policy enforcement point, such as acPostProcForPut, was the sole location for all policy…
Find out more »Anita Nikolich will be presenting FABRIC: Adaptive programmaBle networked Research Infrastructure for Computer science for this webinar.
Find out more »Many users know how to create an experiment using the Chameleon graphics interface, but Jupyter Notebooks allows users the added benefit of doing that in a reproducible and documented way? In this webinar, we will orchestrate an experiment -- from resource allocation to gathering and visualizing the results to tearing it down -- using Jupyter Notebooks.
Find out more »This tutorial describes how to use the Chameleon bare metal reconfigurable testbed to perform computer science experiments. It explains how to use Chameleon’s fully customizable and accessible collection of nodes, accelerators, storage, and innovative networking resources. The tutorial walks through the computer science experimental process and provides hands-on experience with making a hardware reservation and running a pre-designed experiment on Chameleon.
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