On Tue, Jul 16, 2013 at 7:33 PM, Nate Sanders <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have a lot of experience with both industry and academia, and your best
> bet, I think is to go 100% academia here, specifically within seismology if
> you can.  You might be able to do some sort of exchange where you're able to
> get an expert to come in for a few days and "pay" them with access to some
> of your data, instruments, etc that they don't have.
>
> I'd start googling for numpy/scipy users within the seismology community and
> try to catch somebody who has some free time this summer and perhaps turn
> this into a mutually beneficial engagement that's not just about the money.

The seismology community may not be large enough to support this, and
I doubt that your needs are that seismology-specific that you need to
constrain yourself.

But Seattle / UW has a pretty good scientific development with Python
community -- I'll bet you can leverage that. I'd start with the
bootcamp folks:

http://trizpug.org/boot-camp/seapy13/

-Chris


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Christopher Barker, Ph.D.
Oceanographer

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