Jupyter Community Call#
May 28th, 2019#
Date: 28 May 2019 at 9am PST (your timezome)
Link: Youtube Video
Welcome to the All-Jupyter Community Meeting#
Purpose#
The purpose of these monthly video conference calls is to share and demonstrate the awesome things happening in Jupyter community. We invite anyone to present their work, engage in discussion, or just sit in and listen. Whether you have a new lab extension you’ve created, a new jupyterhub deployment you’re excited about, or an nteract papermill pipeline powering your business, we’d love to hear about it! And, we’ll record and publish these calls on YouTube for anyone unable to attend.
For more discussion on the format of these calls, see the thread here.
Short reports, celebrations, shout-outs#
This is a place to make short announcements (without a need for discussion). This is also a great place to give shout-outs to contributors! We’ll read through these at the beginning of the meeting.
Hello from The Turing Way Book Dash :books::dash::dash: in London. This call is right at the end of a day of 18 people working together to improve the openly developed Jupyter book. Our goal is to make «Reproducibility too easy not to do» (:laughing::grimacing::scream_cat:), build a strong and supportive community, and give people the knowledge and confidence they need to contribute to open source projects [name=Kirstie & Turing Way team]
GitHub repo: https://github.com/alan-turing-institute/the-turing-way
The book: https://the-turing-way.netlify.com
Chat room: https://gitter.im/alan-turing-institute/the-turing-way
Agenda Items#
Add your potential agenda item here 24 hours before the meeting at the latest. We will reorganize the agenda so that it fits in the 60m meeting slot.
Feedback and report from Research Software Reactor Sprint [name=Sarah]
Event website: https://www.microsoftevents.com/profile/form/index.cfm?PKformID=0x6927743abcd
Project list: https://github.com/research-software-reactor
New binderhub in the world :baby: :confetti_ball: https://twitter.com/gerardjgorman/status/1131097133292183553
Feedback and report from Jupyter Server Design and Roadmap workshop [name=Luciano]
sponsored by bloomberg
thomas, kevin, etc.
functionality directions, high-level roadmap
decouple frontend from backend: notebook, lab, nteract, voila
using the backend functionality, providing different UIs
how do we accomplish that? jupyter_server extension points
ui
backend
handlers
roadmap
phase 1: integrating with existing uis (notebookclassic, lab)
phase 2: expand functionality
kernel provider pr (e.g. different kernel managers, like Enterprise Kernel Gateway)
next steps:
pr from zak
blog post (illustration)
biweekly calls
timeline:
6.0 release of notebook?
post jupyterlab 1.0?
Qt(5.6)-based PDF output from JupyterLab (0.35) Quick demo of using QtWebEngine to load a notebook in lab and make a PDF. $_{n+1}$th time’s the charm! | issue | repo | [name=Nick]
Attendees#
If you are joining the All-Jupyter Community video meeting, sign in below so we know who was here. Roll call:
| Zach | Jupyter Cal Poly | @Zsailer |
| Amit | ReviewNB | @amit1rrr |
| Kirstie | Alan Turing Institute | @KirstieJane |
| Pete | Thorn | @parente |
| Tony | Quansight | @tonyfast |
| Nick | GTRI | @bollwyvl |
| Luciano | IBM | @lresende |
| Sarah | The Alan Turing Institute | @sgibson91 |
| Saul | Quansight | @saulshanabrook |
| James | MUN | @jmunroe |
| Darian | Two Sigma | @afshin |
| Matthias| UC Merced | @carreau |
| Tania | Microsoft | @trallard |
| Carol | Project Jupyter | @willingc |
| Chris | UNC-Chapel Hill | @cbcunc |