Hi folks, We (Nathan, Meagan, Kacper and I) wanted to share some good news. We've recently received a grant from the NSF SI2 program; NCSA put out a press release here: http://www.ncsa.illinois.edu/news/story/the_yt_project_awarded_nsf_grant_to_... (This includes a link to the full proposal, which goes into some detail.) This is a five year grant, supporting part or all of a couple postdocs (UIUC, Columbia, Wisconsin), a research scientist, some PI time and a graduate student (along with some workshops). It has a couple areas of development that we'll be working on. The strictly technical ones will be related to improving non-spatial indexing, enabling "path" queries in a more full way (think advanced streamlines) and an all-new, symbolic field system. In a sense, these are things we're already kind of familiar with how to work on -- YTEPs, code reivew, documentation, testing, etc. The part that's going to be harder -- from the social perspective -- is that we're going to be working harder to make yt an attractive analysis and visualization system outside of astronomy, without losing its attractiveness *within* astronomy. This cross-domain effort ties into things like Britton's recent work on splitting out yt_astro_analysis, and the idea of compartmentalizing things a bit more within the frontends and whatnot. We've identified an advisory board with folks from geophysics, weather, oceanography, nuclear engineering, plasma physics and observational astro, and we're going to spin up a couple new mailing lists for this purpose: * yt-advisory: advisory board discussions * yt-ssi: administrative info for the grant (possibly boring?) I'm working to get our lists moved to the yt-project.org domain before doing this, though. All of these will be open, although I suspect not of broad interest (and thus why we're creating new ones.) It might turn out that domain-specific discussion ends up overwhelming discussion on yt-dev or yt-users, in which case we can split it out, but for now yt-dev seems like the right place to put that. Anyhow, the main takeaway I want to give from this is: I'm pretty excited, and I am really, really looking forward to the work we're going to do with this. We could not have gotten this far without the amazing community that has grown up around yt. We're going to work on this project in an open, collaborative way in keeping with the spirit of what we've done with yt already. In the proposal itself, we detail the ways in which we will follow the standard yt community norms (for design, review, upstream, etc) and before it was submitted, we discussed it with the yt steering committee to make sure that the language we included did not sideline or "squeeze out" anyone in the community. Ensuring that this *supports*, rather than *detracts from*, the community is absolutely essential to its success, and we will not be doing anything to jeopardize that success: this means more effort on yt, but it does not mean that yt will suddenly become a "professionalized" project that loses sight of how it got here. And, we would welcome feedback -- especially if it seems that we're missing the mark. We're still figuring out how to most effectively do project management for it, but it's going to all be above board, and we'd absolutely *love* to collaborate with interested folks on it. More soon! -Matt & Nathan
Congratulations to you guys for the award! A great honor! Looking forward to making yt more general for a larger audience! Cameron On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 9:31 AM, Matthew Turk <matthewturk@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi folks,
We (Nathan, Meagan, Kacper and I) wanted to share some good news. We've recently received a grant from the NSF SI2 program; NCSA put out a press release here:
http://www.ncsa.illinois.edu/news/story/the_yt_project_ awarded_nsf_grant_to_expand_to_multiple_new_science_domains
(This includes a link to the full proposal, which goes into some detail.)
This is a five year grant, supporting part or all of a couple postdocs (UIUC, Columbia, Wisconsin), a research scientist, some PI time and a graduate student (along with some workshops). It has a couple areas of development that we'll be working on. The strictly technical ones will be related to improving non-spatial indexing, enabling "path" queries in a more full way (think advanced streamlines) and an all-new, symbolic field system. In a sense, these are things we're already kind of familiar with how to work on -- YTEPs, code reivew, documentation, testing, etc.
The part that's going to be harder -- from the social perspective -- is that we're going to be working harder to make yt an attractive analysis and visualization system outside of astronomy, without losing its attractiveness *within* astronomy.
This cross-domain effort ties into things like Britton's recent work on splitting out yt_astro_analysis, and the idea of compartmentalizing things a bit more within the frontends and whatnot.
We've identified an advisory board with folks from geophysics, weather, oceanography, nuclear engineering, plasma physics and observational astro, and we're going to spin up a couple new mailing lists for this purpose:
* yt-advisory: advisory board discussions * yt-ssi: administrative info for the grant (possibly boring?)
I'm working to get our lists moved to the yt-project.org domain before doing this, though. All of these will be open, although I suspect not of broad interest (and thus why we're creating new ones.) It might turn out that domain-specific discussion ends up overwhelming discussion on yt-dev or yt-users, in which case we can split it out, but for now yt-dev seems like the right place to put that.
Anyhow, the main takeaway I want to give from this is: I'm pretty excited, and I am really, really looking forward to the work we're going to do with this. We could not have gotten this far without the amazing community that has grown up around yt. We're going to work on this project in an open, collaborative way in keeping with the spirit of what we've done with yt already.
In the proposal itself, we detail the ways in which we will follow the standard yt community norms (for design, review, upstream, etc) and before it was submitted, we discussed it with the yt steering committee to make sure that the language we included did not sideline or "squeeze out" anyone in the community. Ensuring that this *supports*, rather than *detracts from*, the community is absolutely essential to its success, and we will not be doing anything to jeopardize that success: this means more effort on yt, but it does not mean that yt will suddenly become a "professionalized" project that loses sight of how it got here. And, we would welcome feedback -- especially if it seems that we're missing the mark.
We're still figuring out how to most effectively do project management for it, but it's going to all be above board, and we'd absolutely *love* to collaborate with interested folks on it.
More soon!
-Matt & Nathan _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Cameron Hummels NSF Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Astronomy California Institute of Technology http://chummels.org
That’s extremely exciting! Congratulations!! Best wishes, — Suoqing Ji Ph.D Candidate Department of Physics University of California, Santa Barbara http://physics.ucsb.edu/~suoqing On Aug 11, 2017, 12:37 AM +0800, Cameron Hummels <chummels@gmail.com>, wrote:
Congratulations to you guys for the award! A great honor!
Looking forward to making yt more general for a larger audience!
Cameron
On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 9:31 AM, Matthew Turk <matthewturk@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi folks,
We (Nathan, Meagan, Kacper and I) wanted to share some good news. We've recently received a grant from the NSF SI2 program; NCSA put out a press release here:
http://www.ncsa.illinois.edu/news/story/the_yt_project_awarded_nsf_grant_to_...
(This includes a link to the full proposal, which goes into some detail.)
This is a five year grant, supporting part or all of a couple postdocs (UIUC, Columbia, Wisconsin), a research scientist, some PI time and a graduate student (along with some workshops). It has a couple areas of development that we'll be working on. The strictly technical ones will be related to improving non-spatial indexing, enabling "path" queries in a more full way (think advanced streamlines) and an all-new, symbolic field system. In a sense, these are things we're already kind of familiar with how to work on -- YTEPs, code reivew, documentation, testing, etc.
The part that's going to be harder -- from the social perspective -- is that we're going to be working harder to make yt an attractive analysis and visualization system outside of astronomy, without losing its attractiveness *within* astronomy.
This cross-domain effort ties into things like Britton's recent work on splitting out yt_astro_analysis, and the idea of compartmentalizing things a bit more within the frontends and whatnot.
We've identified an advisory board with folks from geophysics, weather, oceanography, nuclear engineering, plasma physics and observational astro, and we're going to spin up a couple new mailing lists for this purpose:
* yt-advisory: advisory board discussions * yt-ssi: administrative info for the grant (possibly boring?)
I'm working to get our lists moved to the yt-project.org domain before doing this, though. All of these will be open, although I suspect not of broad interest (and thus why we're creating new ones.) It might turn out that domain-specific discussion ends up overwhelming discussion on yt-dev or yt-users, in which case we can split it out, but for now yt-dev seems like the right place to put that.
Anyhow, the main takeaway I want to give from this is: I'm pretty excited, and I am really, really looking forward to the work we're going to do with this. We could not have gotten this far without the amazing community that has grown up around yt. We're going to work on this project in an open, collaborative way in keeping with the spirit of what we've done with yt already.
In the proposal itself, we detail the ways in which we will follow the standard yt community norms (for design, review, upstream, etc) and before it was submitted, we discussed it with the yt steering committee to make sure that the language we included did not sideline or "squeeze out" anyone in the community. Ensuring that this *supports*, rather than *detracts from*, the community is absolutely essential to its success, and we will not be doing anything to jeopardize that success: this means more effort on yt, but it does not mean that yt will suddenly become a "professionalized" project that loses sight of how it got here. And, we would welcome feedback -- especially if it seems that we're missing the mark.
We're still figuring out how to most effectively do project management for it, but it's going to all be above board, and we'd absolutely *love* to collaborate with interested folks on it.
More soon!
-Matt & Nathan _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Cameron Hummels NSF Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Astronomy California Institute of Technology http://chummels.org _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
Yes, congratulations! On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 10:39 AM, Suoqing Ji <suoqing@physics.ucsb.edu> wrote:
That’s extremely exciting! Congratulations!!
Best wishes, — Suoqing Ji Ph.D Candidate Department of Physics University of California, Santa Barbara http://physics.ucsb.edu/~suoqing
On Aug 11, 2017, 12:37 AM +0800, Cameron Hummels <chummels@gmail.com>, wrote:
Congratulations to you guys for the award! A great honor!
Looking forward to making yt more general for a larger audience!
Cameron
On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 9:31 AM, Matthew Turk <matthewturk@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi folks,
We (Nathan, Meagan, Kacper and I) wanted to share some good news. We've recently received a grant from the NSF SI2 program; NCSA put out a press release here:
http://www.ncsa.illinois.edu/news/story/the_yt_project_awarded_nsf_grant_to_...
(This includes a link to the full proposal, which goes into some detail.)
This is a five year grant, supporting part or all of a couple postdocs (UIUC, Columbia, Wisconsin), a research scientist, some PI time and a graduate student (along with some workshops). It has a couple areas of development that we'll be working on. The strictly technical ones will be related to improving non-spatial indexing, enabling "path" queries in a more full way (think advanced streamlines) and an all-new, symbolic field system. In a sense, these are things we're already kind of familiar with how to work on -- YTEPs, code reivew, documentation, testing, etc.
The part that's going to be harder -- from the social perspective -- is that we're going to be working harder to make yt an attractive analysis and visualization system outside of astronomy, without losing its attractiveness *within* astronomy.
This cross-domain effort ties into things like Britton's recent work on splitting out yt_astro_analysis, and the idea of compartmentalizing things a bit more within the frontends and whatnot.
We've identified an advisory board with folks from geophysics, weather, oceanography, nuclear engineering, plasma physics and observational astro, and we're going to spin up a couple new mailing lists for this purpose:
* yt-advisory: advisory board discussions * yt-ssi: administrative info for the grant (possibly boring?)
I'm working to get our lists moved to the yt-project.org domain before doing this, though. All of these will be open, although I suspect not of broad interest (and thus why we're creating new ones.) It might turn out that domain-specific discussion ends up overwhelming discussion on yt-dev or yt-users, in which case we can split it out, but for now yt-dev seems like the right place to put that.
Anyhow, the main takeaway I want to give from this is: I'm pretty excited, and I am really, really looking forward to the work we're going to do with this. We could not have gotten this far without the amazing community that has grown up around yt. We're going to work on this project in an open, collaborative way in keeping with the spirit of what we've done with yt already.
In the proposal itself, we detail the ways in which we will follow the standard yt community norms (for design, review, upstream, etc) and before it was submitted, we discussed it with the yt steering committee to make sure that the language we included did not sideline or "squeeze out" anyone in the community. Ensuring that this *supports*, rather than *detracts from*, the community is absolutely essential to its success, and we will not be doing anything to jeopardize that success: this means more effort on yt, but it does not mean that yt will suddenly become a "professionalized" project that loses sight of how it got here. And, we would welcome feedback -- especially if it seems that we're missing the mark.
We're still figuring out how to most effectively do project management for it, but it's going to all be above board, and we'd absolutely *love* to collaborate with interested folks on it.
More soon!
-Matt & Nathan _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Cameron Hummels NSF Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Astronomy California Institute of Technology http://chummels.org _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
_______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Joseph Smidt <josephsmidt@gmail.com> Theoretical Division P.O. Box 1663, Mail Stop B283 Los Alamos, NM 87545 Office: 505-665-9752 Fax: 505-667-1931
This is so awesome! Congrats to everybody!!! On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 12:42 PM, Joseph Smidt <josephsmidt@gmail.com> wrote:
Yes, congratulations!
On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 10:39 AM, Suoqing Ji <suoqing@physics.ucsb.edu> wrote:
That’s extremely exciting! Congratulations!!
Best wishes, — Suoqing Ji Ph.D Candidate Department of Physics University of California, Santa Barbara http://physics.ucsb.edu/~suoqing
On Aug 11, 2017, 12:37 AM +0800, Cameron Hummels <chummels@gmail.com>, wrote:
Congratulations to you guys for the award! A great honor!
Looking forward to making yt more general for a larger audience!
Cameron
On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 9:31 AM, Matthew Turk <matthewturk@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi folks,
We (Nathan, Meagan, Kacper and I) wanted to share some good news. We've recently received a grant from the NSF SI2 program; NCSA put out a press release here:
awarded_nsf_grant_to_expand_to_multiple_new_science_domains
(This includes a link to the full proposal, which goes into some
detail.)
This is a five year grant, supporting part or all of a couple postdocs (UIUC, Columbia, Wisconsin), a research scientist, some PI time and a graduate student (along with some workshops). It has a couple areas of development that we'll be working on. The strictly technical ones will be related to improving non-spatial indexing, enabling "path" queries in a more full way (think advanced streamlines) and an all-new, symbolic field system. In a sense, these are things we're already kind of familiar with how to work on -- YTEPs, code reivew, documentation, testing, etc.
The part that's going to be harder -- from the social perspective -- is that we're going to be working harder to make yt an attractive analysis and visualization system outside of astronomy, without losing its attractiveness *within* astronomy.
This cross-domain effort ties into things like Britton's recent work on splitting out yt_astro_analysis, and the idea of compartmentalizing things a bit more within the frontends and whatnot.
We've identified an advisory board with folks from geophysics, weather, oceanography, nuclear engineering, plasma physics and observational astro, and we're going to spin up a couple new mailing lists for this purpose:
* yt-advisory: advisory board discussions * yt-ssi: administrative info for the grant (possibly boring?)
I'm working to get our lists moved to the yt-project.org domain before doing this, though. All of these will be open, although I suspect not of broad interest (and thus why we're creating new ones.) It might turn out that domain-specific discussion ends up overwhelming discussion on yt-dev or yt-users, in which case we can split it out, but for now yt-dev seems like the right place to put that.
Anyhow, the main takeaway I want to give from this is: I'm pretty excited, and I am really, really looking forward to the work we're going to do with this. We could not have gotten this far without the amazing community that has grown up around yt. We're going to work on this project in an open, collaborative way in keeping with the spirit of what we've done with yt already.
In the proposal itself, we detail the ways in which we will follow the standard yt community norms (for design, review, upstream, etc) and before it was submitted, we discussed it with the yt steering committee to make sure that the language we included did not sideline or "squeeze out" anyone in the community. Ensuring that this *supports*, rather than *detracts from*, the community is absolutely essential to its success, and we will not be doing anything to jeopardize that success: this means more effort on yt, but it does not mean that yt will suddenly become a "professionalized" project that loses sight of how it got here. And, we would welcome feedback -- especially if it seems that we're missing the mark.
We're still figuring out how to most effectively do project management for it, but it's going to all be above board, and we'd absolutely *love* to collaborate with interested folks on it.
More soon!
-Matt & Nathan _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Cameron Hummels NSF Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Astronomy California Institute of Technology http://chummels.org _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
_______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Joseph Smidt <josephsmidt@gmail.com>
Theoretical Division P.O. Box 1663, Mail Stop B283 Los Alamos, NM 87545 Office: 505-665-9752 Fax: 505-667-1931 _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Jill P. Naiman, Ph.D. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics jill.naiman@cfa.harvard.edu www.astroblend.com www.avriot.com
Fantastic news, congrats! let's have more analysis for plasma and accelerator physics in it, wuup wuup! Axel On August 10, 2017 7:13:16 PM GMT+02:00, Jill Naiman <jnaiman@gmail.com> wrote:
This is so awesome! Congrats to everybody!!!
On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 12:42 PM, Joseph Smidt <josephsmidt@gmail.com> wrote:
Yes, congratulations!
That’s extremely exciting! Congratulations!!
Best wishes, — Suoqing Ji Ph.D Candidate Department of Physics University of California, Santa Barbara http://physics.ucsb.edu/~suoqing
On Aug 11, 2017, 12:37 AM +0800, Cameron Hummels <chummels@gmail.com>, wrote:
Congratulations to you guys for the award! A great honor!
Looking forward to making yt more general for a larger audience!
Cameron
On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 9:31 AM, Matthew Turk <matthewturk@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi folks,
We (Nathan, Meagan, Kacper and I) wanted to share some good news. We've recently received a grant from the NSF SI2 program; NCSA put
out
a press release here:
http://www.ncsa.illinois.edu/news/story/the_yt_project_ awarded_nsf_grant_to_expand_to_multiple_new_science_domains
(This includes a link to the full proposal, which goes into some detail.)
This is a five year grant, supporting part or all of a couple
(UIUC, Columbia, Wisconsin), a research scientist, some PI time and a graduate student (along with some workshops). It has a couple areas of development that we'll be working on. The strictly technical ones will be related to improving non-spatial indexing, enabling "path" queries in a more full way (think advanced streamlines) and an all-new, symbolic field system. In a sense, these are things we're already kind of familiar with how to work on -- YTEPs, code reivew, documentation, testing, etc.
The part that's going to be harder -- from the social perspective -- is that we're going to be working harder to make yt an attractive analysis and visualization system outside of astronomy, without losing its attractiveness *within* astronomy.
This cross-domain effort ties into things like Britton's recent work on splitting out yt_astro_analysis, and the idea of compartmentalizing things a bit more within the frontends and whatnot.
We've identified an advisory board with folks from geophysics, weather, oceanography, nuclear engineering, plasma physics and observational astro, and we're going to spin up a couple new mailing lists for this purpose:
* yt-advisory: advisory board discussions * yt-ssi: administrative info for the grant (possibly boring?)
I'm working to get our lists moved to the yt-project.org domain before doing this, though. All of these will be open, although I suspect not of broad interest (and thus why we're creating new ones.) It might turn out that domain-specific discussion ends up overwhelming discussion on yt-dev or yt-users, in which case we can split it out, but for now yt-dev seems like the right place to put that.
Anyhow, the main takeaway I want to give from this is: I'm pretty excited, and I am really, really looking forward to the work we're going to do with this. We could not have gotten this far without
amazing community that has grown up around yt. We're going to work on this project in an open, collaborative way in keeping with the spirit of what we've done with yt already.
In the proposal itself, we detail the ways in which we will follow
standard yt community norms (for design, review, upstream, etc) and before it was submitted, we discussed it with the yt steering committee to make sure that the language we included did not sideline or "squeeze out" anyone in the community. Ensuring that this *supports*, rather than *detracts from*, the community is absolutely essential to its success, and we will not be doing anything to jeopardize that success: this means more effort on yt, but it does not mean that yt will suddenly become a "professionalized" project
On Thu, Aug 10, 2017 at 10:39 AM, Suoqing Ji <suoqing@physics.ucsb.edu> wrote: postdocs the the that
loses sight of how it got here. And, we would welcome feedback -- especially if it seems that we're missing the mark.
We're still figuring out how to most effectively do project management for it, but it's going to all be above board, and we'd absolutely *love* to collaborate with interested folks on it.
More soon!
-Matt & Nathan _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Cameron Hummels NSF Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Astronomy California Institute of Technology http://chummels.org _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
_______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joseph Smidt <josephsmidt@gmail.com>
Theoretical Division P.O. Box 1663, Mail Stop B283 Los Alamos, NM 87545 Office: 505-665-9752 Fax: 505-667-1931 _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Jill P. Naiman, Ph.D. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics jill.naiman@cfa.harvard.edu www.astroblend.com www.avriot.com
participants (6)
-
Axel Huebl
-
Cameron Hummels
-
Jill Naiman
-
Joseph Smidt
-
Matthew Turk
-
Suoqing Ji