--- tags: talks redirect: 2019-a-few-talks date: 2019-06-25 --- # A few recent talks Lately I've given quite a number of talks about the Jupyter and Binder ecosystems for various purposes. Before each of the talks, I make the slides available at a public address in case others are interested in following up with the material. For those who missed the talks (or the subsequent tweets about them), here are a few of the more recent ones. A word of warning: there's a lot of overlap between these talks - I'm not crazy enough to re-invent the wheel each time I have to speak. However, maybe folks will find some value in the different angles taken in each case. ## The Berkeley Data 8 Stack (60 min) This talk covers some of the technical infrastructure behind the pedagogical efforts here at UC Berkeley. It's a brief dive into JupyterHub distributions and how they fit into an institution like UC Berkeley. [https://bit.ly/2019-data8-jupyter](https://bit.ly/2019-data8-jupyter) ## Open infrastructure for open science (5 min) This one was a quick overview of the Binder ecosystem for a community focused mostly around reproducibility and publishing. Lots of action-items in here :-) [https://bit.ly/2019-elife-cc-holdgraf](https://bit.ly/2019-elife-cc-holdgraf) ## Reproducibility with Binder @ ASM This covers the Binder Project and the tools that it creates for open, reproducible science. It was geared towards a less-technical audience than many of the conferences I normally speak at. It covers more of a users' perspective of mybinder.org, and how this might fit into reproducible publishing. [https://bit.ly/2019-ASM-jupyter](https://bit.ly/2019-ASM-jupyter) ## Reproducibility with Binder @ UW Reproducibility workshop This talk goes into more depth on the technical side of the reproducibility efforts with Jupyter and Binder. It was given in the context of a [two-day workshop on reproducible environments and publishing](https://escience.washington.edu/writing-reproducible-executable-scientific-papers-with-r-python-a-hands-on-workshop/). [https://bit.ly/2019-uw-reproducibility-jupyter](https://bit.ly/2019-uw-reproducibility-jupyter) ## Binder in the cloud @ csvconf A broad overview of the Binder ecosystem and the technical stack that lies underneath it, as well as a short aside on the composable, modular approach that Jupyter takes towards building these tools [https://bit.ly/2019-binder-csvconf](https://bit.ly/2019-binder-csvconf) ## Jupyter Book @ Strada An overview of the [jupyter book project](https://jupyter.org/jupyter-book). This covers the technical stack behind the tool that converts collections of Jupyter Noteoboks into an HTML website book. [https://bit.ly/2019-strada-jupyter-book](https://bit.ly/2019-strada-jupyter-book)