The call is today (2024-06-20) at 17:00 UTC (19:00 CEST, for example)
Timezone converter:
https://time.is/1700_20_June_2024_in_UTC?Debian_GNU/Linux_for_Scientific_Research
Thank you Andreas for presenting!
On 20/06/2024 13.15, Andreas Tille wrote:
Hi,
feel free to pick the relevant data
Hi,
feel free to pick the relevant data from this document
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rcvtsD5QVmmLxSDNxm6FBrWdI0GjXSZtfJ-vkGfKPO4
if you want to join. Thanks to all who provided input which
was really valuable for me.
Kind regards
Andreas.
Am Sun, May 19, 2024 at 01:12:40PM
On 20/05/2024 21:00, Steven Robbins wrote:
Hello,
On Sunday, May 19, 2024 9:31:02 A.M. CDT Tony Travis wrote:
You can't ignore the host OS when you talk about HPC applications and
the HEP (High Energy Physics) community put a lot of effort into
developing good node provisioning systems and
Hello,
On Sunday, May 19, 2024 9:31:02 A.M. CDT Tony Travis wrote:
> You can't ignore the host OS when you talk about HPC applications and
> the HEP (High Energy Physics) community put a lot of effort into
> developing good node provisioning systems and job-scheduling for HPC.
> Consequently,
On Sun, 2024-05-19 at 13:12 +0200, Andreas Tille wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have an invitation to have some talk with the title
>
> Debian GNU/Linux for Scientific Research
>
>
I learned from some of the LIGO sysadmins at Caltech that some of the
LIGO systems are using Debian.
The LIGO
On 19/05/2024 12:12, Andreas Tille wrote:
Hi,
I have an invitation to have some talk with the title
Debian GNU/Linux for Scientific Research
Abstract:
Over the past decade, Enterprise Linux has dominated large-scale
research computing infrastructure. However, recent developments
Hi,
I have an invitation to have some talk with the title
Debian GNU/Linux for Scientific Research
Abstract:
Over the past decade, Enterprise Linux has dominated large-scale
research computing infrastructure. However, recent developments have
sparked increased interest in
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