OctConf 2017: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 09:18, 6 March 2017

We are happy to announce the upcoming Octave Conference 2017 to be held at CERN, near Geneva, Switzerland, from March 20th until March 22nd. The Local Organising Committee is happy and proud that CERN will host this event for at least two reasons: Octave [2] is a fundamental tool of analysis and research for hundreds of CERN scientists; Octave and CERN share and promote the same values of openness, cooperation, diversity, quality and commitment.

The three-day event will be an opportunity for sharing experiences, planning the future of Octave and promoting its use among the scientific community and beyond. There will two open sessions on Monday and Tuesday showcasing Octave and some interesting and successful Octave stories. To register officially, please use the CERN conference manager Indico. In addition, *please* add your name to the Participants section of this page so we can plan appropriately.

We are working out the details of the programme, and the call for contributions and abstract is still open. You are all invited to submit an abstract and present your experience with Octave at the conference!

We are hopeful that the key members of the Octave development team will make it, both from oversea and from Europe. You can find more updated information on the programme in the CERN's OctConf webpage and in here.

Dates

The conference will run for three days from Monday, March 20th through Wednesday, March 22nd.


Location

Geneva, Switzerland

Venue

The upcoming Octconf 2017 will take place at CERN (European Center for Nuclear Research)

At CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, physicists and engineers are probing the fundamental structure of the universe. They use the world's largest and most complex scientific instruments to study the basic constituents of matter – the fundamental particles. The particles are made to collide together at close to the speed of light. The process gives the physicists clues about how the particles interact, and provides insights into the fundamental laws of nature. The instruments used at CERN are purpose-built particle accelerators and detectors. Accelerators boost beams of particles to high energies before the beams are made to collide with each other or with stationary targets. Detectors observe and record the results of these collisions.

Founded in 1954, the CERN laboratory sits astride the Franco-Swiss border near Geneva. It was one of Europe's first joint ventures and now has 22 member states.

Social activities

Two social events have been foreseen, besides the coffee and the lunch breaks:

  • A unique visit to CERN
  • A Fondue dinner down-town Geneva

Travelling

The information below is taken from CERN instructions. Please check that link for further details.

How to get to CERN infographics

   CERN Reception - Meyrin
   CERN - European Organization for Nuclear Research
   385 route de Meyrin
   CH-1217 Meyrin - Geneva
   Switzerland
  • GPS Coordinates

Latitude: 46.2314284

Longitude: 6.0539718


By train

Coming from the Geneva railway station at Cornavin

Tram - Take the number 18 tram to "CERN" which is the final stop at the CERN entrance.

Ticket costs 3 CHF full-fare / 2 CHF reduced-fare (Ticket "Tout Genève" on the ticket machine).

See the TPG web site for full details.

By car

  • From Switzerland

Follow signs for "Aéroport", "Lyon" and "Meyrin".

Once you are in Meyrin, follow signs for "St. Genis" (which is just beyond the border, in France).

Before reaching St Genis, the CERN site is on your left on "Route de Meyrin", just before you reach the border.

  • From France (département of Ain)

Follow signs for "Gex" or "St. Genis". When you reach the border, CERN is on your right immediately after passing through customs.

See Parking for parking information.

By plane

Coming from the Geneva International Airport at Cointrin

Taxi - approximately 35CHF.

Bus - First take a public transport ticket from the machine you will find at the exit to the baggage collection hall, just before customs control. Then:

Option 1: Take bus Y direction "CERN" and get off at the CERN stop opposite the large Globe and the CERN site.

Option 2: Take bus 23, 28 or 57 and get off at the stop "Blandonnet" and then catch the Tram number 18, final stop "CERN".

See the TPG web site for full details.

Tips and tricks

A normal lunch at CERN costs about 15 CHF, inclusive of one coffee and one delicious dessert.

A bus ride from the airport to CERN is free of charge, if you take a ticket at the vending machine in the baggage claim area. Should you miss that vending machine, a ticket will cost you 3.00 CHF. https://genevalunch.com/guides/travel/the-cheerful-traveler-geneva-airport-public-transport/


Accommodation

The conference will take place in the CERN's main site (Meyrin). You can try your luck and search for an accommodation in one of the CERN Hostels.

Should the CERN hostels be full, or should you prefer to stay in Geneva, we advise you to consult your favourite on-line booking portal (www.booking.com, www.tripadvisor.com, www.trivago.com, www.expedia.com etc.) and to contact the hotel directly in order to identify the lowest tariff available for CERN users and collaborators (preferential tariffs may apply in some cases).

Hotels in the vicinity of "Gare Cornavin" (Geneva's main railway station), or along "Route de Meyrin", are particularly recommended. Tram number 18 links Gare Cornavin to CERN in 20' (see timetable on the TPG's webpage).

Notice that, by staying in hotel, youth hostel or at a campsite, you are entitled to receive a personal and non transferable Geneva Transport Card for free, which will allow you to use the whole public transportation system of Geneva for the length of your stay for free. This includes buses, trams, trains, and yellow taxi-boats - Mouettes. Just ask for it upon arrival on the reception.

Suggestions for Sessions

Approximately half of each day will be devoted to presentations. The remainder will be used for informal discussions, code sprints, etc.

Please propose session topics in the schedule below. The actual time slot you pick is not important--we can re-arrange the schedule later--but we need to know what topics are of interest.

In addition, if you have a poster, rather than a full presentation, there is a separate sign-up sheet below.

Schedule

During the daytime: CERN offers many areas where people can socialize and/or discuss, informally. For instance, the CERN main restaurant is open until 23:00 (11:00 PM).

Time Monday
(General GNU Octave day)
Tuesday
(GNU Octave Packages day)
Wednesday
(Libre and Open Source Software day)
9:00-9:30 Open slot GSoC project: Exponential Integrators
(Chiara Segala)
Unconference
9:30-10:00 Octave for N dimensions and microscope image processing (Carnë Draug / David Miguel Susano Pinto) SOCIS project: Improve iterative methods for sparse linear systems
(Cristiano Dorigo)
10:00-10:15 Coffee Coffee Coffee
10:15-10:50 Octave for Particle Accelerator Design (A. Latina) Support of free software in public institutions: the KiCad case (J. Serrano) MOOC: Matlab and Octave for beginners (Simone Deparis)
10:50-11:25 publish your code with Octave (Kai T. Ohlhus) Discussion SIAM event by EPFL
(To be confirmed. Move it to the first day if you think it would be better)
11:25-12:00 Open slot GSoC project: ode15{i,s} (20 min)
The future of the Neural Network package (15 min)
(Francesco Faccio)
12:00-12:45 Discussion Discussion 8/16-bit simulation with GNU Octave (Andreas Stahel)

12:45-14:00

Lunch Lunch Lunch
14:00-14:35 Open Slot (Plenary session: CERN main auditorium)
Status of Octave - 1h
(John W. Eaton)
Technical overview of user code parallelization (Olaf Till) Visit to CERN sites
14:35-15:10 Open Slot (Plenary session: CERN main auditorium)
15:10-15:45
15:45-16:00 Coffee Coffee Coffee


16:00-18:00


Code Sprint Code Sprint Organization of OctConf2018
18:00-19:00 Fondue night (alternative 1) Fondue night (alternative 2) Closing and Farewell
19:00-20:00

Poster Session

If you have a poster demonstrating how you use Octave to address an application in your field please add your name and poster topic to the list below. We will schedule an appropriately sized space based on the number of posters.

Confirmed Posters:

Title Author
Fast approximation of complicated simulators JuanPi Carbajal
VSDP – A GNU Octave/MATLAB® toolbox for verified semidefinite-quadratic-linear programming Kai T. Ohlhus
Characterization of high-Tc granular superconductors in a magnetic fields Michele Manzini

Participants

To register officially, please use the CERN conference manager Indico.

Funding

Previous OctConf

OctConf 2015

Next OctConf

OctConf 2018