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Has the FOSDEM logo always been a coronavirus ?
It's not my plan to talk much about opensource/tech stuff much on this capsule. Those things are more part of my work than of my hobbies. And plenty of other capsule have interesting things to say about those subject. But I am at FOSDEM this year so here are quick notes of the presentation I found interesting and what I liked about them.
Philippe Swartvagher had a really interesting presentation on how to make experiments more reproducible. Guix got to shine in the spotlight again thanks to its ability to provide reproducibility for code, patching, builds, and environment all in one convenient description.
On the post-processing and ploting side of things, the tow advice from Philippe hit close to home:
All in all that talk was very reminisent of my experience in research. I still haven't tried Guix but I'm now more interested.
FOSDEM: Making reproducible and publishable large-scale HPC experiments
Antoni Ivanov presented the Versatile Data Kit (VDK) a plugin for JupyterLab, that is designed to help turn notebooks into production computation drivers. The problems this tool tries to solves are also for the most part the things that make notebooks unreproducible. So this might be a tool to look into if your are using Jupyter and want to make sure you'll be able to rerun the notebook perfectly.
FOSDEM: Productionizing Jupyter Notebooks
In ten years debian has gone from thinking it would be impossible for people to reproduce their exact binary distribution from source, to having 95% of their packages be reproducible. Impressive work, but the biggest challenge are are yet to come since neither the kernel nor the grub are reproducible.
FOSDEM: Reproducible Builds: The First Ten Years
https://reproducible-builds.org/
Saw an interesting presentation by James Bottomley about wanting to use the Trusted Platform Module for they cryptography needs. The global take away seemed to be that integration has been somewhat slow due to low standardisation in the modules space. But it did raise a few interesting ideas.
FOSDEM: Using your Laptop TPM as a Secure Key Store: Are we there yet?