Data source: https://csvconf.com/
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Link | rowid | title | speaker | time | day | room | url ▲ | datetime | abstract | image |
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52 | 52 | Version Controlled Stakeholder Reporting: Building an End-to-End Data Reporting Infrastructure | Jose M Hernandez | 3:30 PM | May 9 2019 | Daisy Bingham Room | https://csvconf.com/speakers/#jose-m-hernandez | 2019-05-09T15:30:00 | King County, Washington is currently undergoing complex social and economic changes that have both positive and negative impacts on local residents. With rising rents displacing low-income households to outlying areas or into homelessness, there is a critical need to understand the prevalence and mechanisms of housing insecurity for government organizations tasked to address these issues. Currently, our team of Data and social scientists at the University of Washington, eScience Institute are collaborating with stakeholders across the King County Housing and Homelessness prevention agencies to derive meaningful insights from their data. While their aim is not to produce academic research, our findings may have significant and immediate impact for their organizational practices and the communities they are tasked to serve. In this context and where there is an iterative and constant feedback loop present, reproducibility of the results we present to them, from figures, tables, and even written language is critical. To ensure a successful collaboration, our team has built an end to end data reporting infrastructure to produce reports for our stakeholders that are reproducible and version controlled from raw data to final product. We employ some common open source tools to accomplish this, including R/Rstudio, Python, Rmarkdown, and git. | https://csvconf.com/img/speakers-2019/jmhernandez.jpg |
26 | 26 | Fundamentals of Research Software Sustainability | Daniel S. Katz | 3:30 PM | May 8 2019 | Daisy Bingham Room | https://csvconf.com/speakers/#daniel-s-katz | 2019-05-08T15:30:00 | Software sustainability means different things to different groups of people, including the persistence of working software, and the persistence of people, or funding. While we can generally define sustainability as the inflow of resources is sufficient to do the needed work, where those resources both include and are somewhat transferrable into human effort, users, funders, managers, and developers (or maintainers) all mean somewhat different things when they use sustainable in the context of research software. This talk will illustrate some of these different views, and their corresponding aims. It will also provide some guidance on quantifying research software sustainability from some of these views. | https://csvconf.com/img/speakers-2019/dskatz.jpg |
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