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  1. QUBES: A community supporting teaching and learning in quantitative biology

    24 Jun 2016 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Michael Drew LaMar (presenter)

    QUBES (Quantitative Undergraduate Biology Education and Synthesis) is a 5-year, multi-institutional NSF-funded project to address a “call to action” in reports put forth by many institutions, including NSF, NIH, AAAS, and HHMI, among others. The challenges in these reports include...

  2. Rappture with C and Fortran

    21 Jun 2009 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Michael McLennan

    Rappture is the Rapid application infrastructure, a toolkit within the HUBzero platform that makes it easy to develop a graphical user interface for scientific modeling tools. Many such tools are written in C and Fortran.This talk picks up where Introducing the Rappture Toolkit and Review of...

  3. Rappture with C and Fortran

    05 Apr 2010 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Michael McLennan

    Rappture is the Rapid APPlication infrastrucTURE, a toolkit within the HUBzero platform that makes it easy to develop a graphical user interface for scientific modeling tools. Many such tools are written in C and Fortran.This talk picks up where "Introducing the Rappture Toolkit" left off,...

  4. Remote Sensing Analysis on HUBzero

    24 Jun 2016 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Larry Biehl (presenter)

    MultiSpec is a remote sensing analysis tool being developed on MyGeoHub.org as part of the Geospatial Analysis Building Blocks (GABBs) NSF-funded and the IndianaView/AmericaView USGS-funded projects. The tool has been adapted from the desktop Macintosh and Windows versions...

  5. The GABBs Report – Building Geospatial Capabilities in HUBzero

    24 Jun 2016 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Carol Song (presenter)

    Geospatial data are present everywhere today with the proliferation of location-aware computing devices. This is especially true in the scientific community where large amounts of data are driving research and education activities in many domains. Collaboration over geospatial data, for example,...

  6. The Hub Concept for Scientific Collaboration

    02 Feb 2010 | Publications | Contributor(s): Michael McLennan

    The software that powers the popular nanoHUB.org site has been extracted into package called the HUBzero Platform for Scientific Collaboration. The Rosen Center for Advanced Computing, the research computing group at Purdue University, has been using this package for two years to create a...

  7. Towards accessible, reproducible, and transparent research in the life sciences: an innovative open source VRE approach in Western France

    24 Jun 2016 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Yvan Le Bras (presenter)

    Research processes in Life Sciences are evolving at a rapid pace. This evolution, due to technological breakthroughs, allows to address more ambitious scientific problems and generalizes the digital aspect of the research data in Life Sciences. If facing the actual data deluge context represents...

  8. Upload, Configure, Analyze, and Share Geospatial Data in 3 Minutes

    24 Jun 2016 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Lan Zhao (presenter), Hou-Jen Ko, Carol Song

    Geospatial data is growing rapidly in volumes thanks to the advancement of large observatories, sensor networks, GPS technologies, and personal devices. Such data is crucial in research and education across many disciplines, making great impacts on our daily life. However, it is not an easy task...

  9. Uploading and Publishing New Tools

    05 Apr 2010 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Michael McLennan

    HUBzero lets you access simulation tools online via an ordinary web browser. Where do the tools come from? From you--hundreds of you throughout the world who are developing simulation and modeling tools for your hub. Anyone can upload their own code onto a hub and publish a tool for a limited...

  10. Uploading and Publishing New Tools

    02 Apr 2011 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Michael McLennan

    HUBzero lets you access simulation tools online via an ordinary web browser. Where do the tools come from? From you--hundreds of you throughout the world who are developing simulation and modeling tools for your hub. Anyone can upload their own code onto a hub and publish a tool for a limited...

  11. Using the HUBZero Platform to Enable Remote Computing on DiaGrid

    24 Jun 2016 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Christopher Thompson, Robert L Campbell, Steven Clark, Claire Stirm

    The DiaGrid hub has a history of creating tools using the HUBzero platform to connect users with scientific models running on computing resources around the world. We believe many tool developers could benefit from a presentation to discuss all the ways remote execution is supported including...

  12. Using Workspaces to Develop Tools

    05 Apr 2010 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Michael McLennan

    One of the most powerful tools on any hub is something we call a workspace, which is a full-featured Linux desktop that you can access any time, any place, from your web browser. Workspaces are fully loaded with the latest open source software, including HUBzero's own Rappture toolkit, Octave, a...

  13. View from Purdue's CIO

    24 Jun 2016 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Gerry McCartney (presenter)

    A view from Purdue University's CIO of ITaP (Information Technology at Purdue).

  14. Virtual Infrastructure for Data Intensive Analysis: An Update

    24 Jun 2016 | Seminars | Contributor(s): Jeanette M Sperhac (presenter)

    In order to expose undergraduates in the humanities to data intensive computing, University at Buffalo's Center for Computational Research (CCR) teamed with State University of New York (SUNY) Oneonta.The resulting HUBzero-based Virtual Infrastructure for Data Intensive Analysis (VIDIA) has...

  15. Workspace

    16 Apr 2009 | Tools | Contributor(s): Nicholas J. Kisseberth

    Development Workspace

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