By Raniere Silva, Community Officer, Software Sustainability Institute.
The Software Sustainability Institute are very pleased to announce Microsoft as the primary sponsor of the Docker Containers for Reproducible Research Workshop (C4RR). They have offered very kindly Azure Cloud time to every attendee! Azure Container Service supports Docker and can be used to improve reproducible research.
The Docker Containers for Reproducible Research Workshop is attracting people from a broad range of backgrounds. To have an idea of who is attending we provide their organisation details on the list below.
This procedure has been adopted from the Ada Initiative's guide titled "workshop anti-harassment/Responding to Reports”.
Contact any of the following staff
Iain Emsley, Software Sustainability Institute staff, iain.emsley@oerc.ox.ac.uk
The Docker Containers for Reproducible Research Workshop brings together researchers, developers and educators to explore best practices when using containers, not only Docker, and the future of research software with containers.
We value the participation of each stakeholder and want all attendees to have an enjoyable and fulfilling experience. Accordingly, all attendees are expected to show respect and courtesy to other attendees throughout the workshop and at all workshop events, including online.
Abstracts of lightning talks sorted by last name of the first author.
The lightning talks will take place in the afternoon of the second day, 28 June, starting at 15:00.
Using Containers to drive reproducibility best practices in Bioinformatics trainingMark Fernandes, Quadram Institute Biosciences
At Quadram Institute Biosciences, we have implemented an innovative training programme called ‘Bite-sized Bioinformatics’.
Abstracts of demos sorted by last name of the first author.
The demos will take place in the morning of the second day, 28 June, between 9:00 and 12:00.
RosettaHUB, connecting the dots between clouds, containers and research softwareKarim Chine, RosettaHUB Ltd.
Abstracts of talks sorted by last name of the first author.
Singularity Containers for Reproducible ResearchMichael Bauer, University of Michigan / Lawrence Berkeley National Lab