Jupyter / Jupyter Cal Poly

Add meeting Rate page Subscribe

Jupyter / Jupyter Cal Poly

These are all the meetings we have in "Jupyter Cal Poly" (part of the organization "Jupyter"). Click into individual meeting pages to watch the recording and search or read the transcript.

18 Sep 2021

During the Cal Poly San Luis Obispo (SLO) Project Jupyter Summer Internship, a team of mentors from various partner institutions and companies trained a cohort of 10 students who built three innovative JupyterLab extensions that we’re excited to share with the community!

In this video you will learn more about the third extension:

JupyterLab Bifrost built by Angela Chawla, Jay Ahn, and John Waidhofer, mentored by Arvind Satyanarayan from MIT, Piyush Jain from Amazon Web Services, and Brian Granger from Amazon Web Services/Cal Poly.

Jupyter Bifrost is an interactive data visualization extension that allows users to edit charts and export updated pandas dataframes. It circumvents the tedium of static visualization and complexity of code. This allows users to focus on data exploration and quickly extract insights from datasets. https://github.com/jupytercalpoly/Jupyter-Bifrost

View the other two presentations, JupyterLab Commenting & JupyterLab Notifications: https://youtu.be/1ift0Ew1J20

A special thank you to Zach Sailer from Apple, Steven Silvester from Apple, and Kevin Jahns from Yjs for supporting and mentoring the entire cohort this summer.

Background on the program:
For more than 15 years undergraduate and graduate student interns have played a critical role in the Jupyter community. Over the years at Cal Poly SLO, 51 engineering and design students have built and helped to build some amazing things: IPython Widgets, nbconvert, JupyterLab, JupyterLab Table of Contents, JupyterLab Git extension, JupyterLab Status Bar, and others. Multiple current and former Jupyter Steering Council members and core developers started out working with us as students.

This program would not be possible without our funders: Leona M and Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust, Alfred P Sloan Foundation, Schmidt Futures, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

00:00 Introduction
05:10 JupyterLab BiFrost
23:30 BiFrost Questions
  • 5 participants
  • 28 minutes
jupiter
internship
project
interns
introduction
collaboration
presenting
prominence
2021
california
youtube image

18 Sep 2021

During the Cal Poly San Luis Obispo (SLO) Project Jupyter Summer Internship, a team of mentors from various partner institutions and companies supported a cohort of 10 students who built three innovative JupyterLab extensions that we’re excited to share with the community!

In this video you will learn more about two extensions:

JupyterLab Commenting built by Cameron Toy, Chloe Frerichs, Rahul Nair, and Srirag Vuppala, mentored by Christopher Brooks, Adam Patterson, and April Wang from University of Michigan.
The JupyterLab Commenting extension lets users comment collaboratively on any file. Interactions are intuitive and make providing feedback or communicating in real-time easy. Comments also support markdown, LaTeX, and more.
https://github.com/jupytercalpoly/jupyterlab-comments.

JupyterLab Notifications and JupyterLab ToDo built by Andrii Ieroshenko, Harshit Mittal, and Marissa Thai, mentored by Afshin Darian from Two Sigma and Cameron Oelsen from Google.
JupyterLab Notifications provides a push notifications system for extension developers and users alike. Notifications API allows extensions to deliver toast notifications to users, while the Notification Center manages their notifications.
https://github.com/jupytercalpoly/jupyterlab-notifications.

JupyterLab's To-Do Lists extension enhances collaboration by allowing users to create checklists, create nested lists, assign tasks to collaborators, and link items to other elements of the JupyterLab ecosystem. Users will be able to create checklist files from the JupyterLab launcher and work with them as standard files.
https://github.com/jupytercalpoly/jupyterlab-todo

View the third extension from this summer, JupyterLab Bifrost: https://youtu.be/HgxsWLKQQHk

A special thank you to Zach Sailer from Apple, Steven Silvester from Apple, and Kevin Jahns from Yjs for supporting and mentoring the entire cohort this summer.

Background on the program:
For more than 15 years undergraduate and graduate student interns have played a critical role in the Jupyter community. Over the years at Cal Poly SLO, 51 engineering and design students have built and helped to build some amazing things: IPython Widgets, nbconvert, JupyterLab, JupyterLab Table of Contents, JupyterLab Git extension, JupyterLab Status Bar, and others. Multiple current and former Jupyter Steering Council members and core developers started out working with us as students.

This program would not be possible without our funders: Leona M and Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust, Alfred P Sloan Foundation, Schmidt Futures, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. Thank you for your continued support and belief in this program.

00:00 Introduction
07:59 JupyterLab Commenting
21:00 Commenting Questions
31:08 JupyterLab To-Do Lists
48:54 To-Do Lists Questions
  • 9 participants
  • 54 minutes
jupiter
project
internship
california
collaboration
presenting
thanks
2021
funding
professor
youtube image