How quick is lightning?
Lightning is pretty quick: two minutes. You are also allowed only one slide. You'll be presenting alongside a countdown timer, so you'll have to keep to time. However, it's amazing how much you can present in two minutes (and practising before hand is the best way to ensure on the day yours is a good one). If you are preparing your talk please have a read of our handy tips.
If you want more time to investigate your subject, let us know and we can add the topic to our series of discussion sessions.
Record of lightning talk topics at CW14
Wednesday 11.20 - 12.00
- Helping you with your software - the Institute's Open Call - Steve Crouch
- Collective Mind: public framework and repository for collaborative and reproducible research and experimentation - Grigori Fursin
- Sharing software from research: what policy for funders? - Matthew Brack
- Science and Vagrant - Jure Triglav
- "The case for open computer programs" in Neuroscience - Stephen Eglen
- EPSRC UK National Service for Computational Chemistry Software - Ling Ge
- The NSCCS - a Learning Environment for Computational Chemistry Software - Alexandra Simperler
- Cloud-sourcing: the best of both worlds? - Philip Fowler
- Tracking of fine-scale animal movements - Robyn A. Grant
- Re-searching Research: 'Yep. Looks about right' - Leanne Wake
- Coupling Codes - Derek Groen
- Recomputation in Scientific Experiments - Olexandr Konovalov
- Reproducible Research with Virtual Experiments - Jonathan Cooper
- My PhD thesis: one giant Makefile - Fabian Renn
- Dawn Science, a Collaborative Analysis Workbench - Mark Basham
- Planning means progress - Neil Chue Hong
- Training biologists in reproducible research in the context of the CGAT programme - Andreas Heger
Wednesday 13.00 - 14.00
- Creating a University Continuous Integration server with Jenkins: the story so far - James Hetherington
- Hackday: Taking Github / Jenkins interaction to the next level - Jens Nielsen
- Make programs scriptable and broaden impact - James Spencer
- Python interfaces to legacy codes for reproducibility - Robin Wilson
- More than tools... - Laurent Gatto
- Growing confidence as a researcher/coder - Jane Charlesworth
- Multiscale model and repositories for In silico oncology - Daniele Tartarini
- Infrastructure collaborations: maximising benefit and reducing reinvention - Rob Davey
- Research Data, the First Mile - Graham Klyne
- Archaeoinformatics - an information systems framework for archaeology - Ahmad Alam
- Software Methods for Irreproducible Research - Michael Fischer
- Three Keys to Reproducible Scientific Computing - Jan Kim
- Advertising new species on social media - Ross Mounce
- MultiSim - Nicolas Gruel
- Institute’s Software and Research Android App Coming Soon! - Devasena Inupakutika
- Publication and Citation of Scientific Software with Persistent Identifiers - Martin Hammitzsch
- Software Prescriptions for Clinicians - Liberty Foreman
- BioJS a JavaScript framework for biological data representation - Manuel Corpas
- New approaches to verification and abstraction - Dominic Orchard
- Docker for reproducible science - Bruno Vieira
- ChemBioHub - Karen Porter
- UCL Research Software Development - James Hetherington
- Readme.md - Arfon Smith