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OSG Scientific Software Ecosystems Workshop. The OSG/CMU Scientific Software Ecosystem Meeting was held February 16 & 17, 2010 in Los Angeles. It was an invitation meeting on scientific software development ecosystems, organized by the SciSoft research team at CMU (Jim Herbsleb and James Howison) and the Open Science Grid, hosted by LIGO at CalTech (special thanks to Kent Blackburn). The purpose of the meeting was to advance the research of the VOSS award by eliciting data regarding research workflows and software components.

Participants were able to learn from each other in order to improve how we produce, share and sustain scientific software in our various fields. There was also an opportunity to generate informal input regarding software ecosystem issues. Participants from virtual organizations of the Open Science Grid, and other interested parties, prepared position/discussion papers addressing questions in the provided template, and distributed to all participants before the meeting. Research Report - Turning the microscope inwards: Studying scientific software ecosystems. Almost every workflow that generates scientific results today involves software: from configuration and control of instruments, to statistical analysis, simulation and visualization.

Research Report - Turning the microscope inwards: Studying scientific software ecosystems

This means that creating and maintaining software is a significant activity in scientific laboratories, including science and engineering virtual organizations. Our research group at Carnegie Mellon University is examining scientific software as an ecosystem, seeking to understand the circumstances in which software is created and shared. The goal of this Open Science Grid project is to identify effective practices and provide input to science funding policy. Towards this end, the OSG/CMU Scientific Software Ecosystem Workshop was held 16-17 February 2010 in Los Angeles at the facilities of the LIGO collaboration. Identifying a social media workflow « P Morgan Brown. Whenever I start talking to people about social media invarably the question arises “Where do I find the time?”

Identifying a social media workflow « P Morgan Brown

It’s easy to understand where they’re coming from. After sitting through several hours of eye-opening presentations about a brand new world of communication and engagement people sit back and think “but I already can’t get everything I need to do done,” and so they come asking “Where do I find the time?” A fair question to be sure. Trying to Tweet, Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube all while trying to do whatever job you’re supposed to be doing seems fairly impossible at the onset. Platform for Scientific Collaboration. What can science networking online do for you - SlideShare.

Kepler: Kepler Project. Welcome to OMII-UK. Publishing Workflow Tutorial - Confluence Extension - Confluence. AJAX Boot Camp.