 Or you can close the camera. No, no. Okay, first, you can go ahead and try it out, maybe. I'm going to stop sharing my screen. I look like a computer. Alright, I'm going to put my brand. The brand should look like a mask for your phone. I think the brand should look like a mask along with somebody else. And go get a napkin. And a good brand. Okay. Yeah, but it's funny that I want to go ahead and do it. I guess I'll just... This is my screen. So, I'm going to get on to that. Alright, alright. Okay, good. I'm going to go ahead and get this. Yeah, I guess I'll go on to... This is my screen. I'm going to go up on it. I'm going to go inside the screen. But that's just why I'm not holding on. Okay. Yeah, I see it. Okay. Yeah, thank you. If you can show our screen while we're doing this presentation first, would then other people want to show yours? I'm sorry, it's looking really good anyway. But for now, having my screen so people don't feel it makes sense, we can test our upstairs curtains. Yeah, it's because it's in the snow, that's because it's in the snow. So, that's a lot of good stuff. So, that's a lot of good stuff. Yeah, it's a lot of good stuff. So, that's a lot of good stuff. So, that's a lot of good stuff. You should jump into the YouTube channel. You should jump into the YouTube channel. This is one on their faces, or it's just me. I created a live event in case it doesn't work. I pasted it into depth. I know we're both here, but there's something nice about seeing cute faces sitting far away. Yeah. My impression is pretty informal, so I wouldn't get too, I mean, you can say what we're working on so, um, and do you, do you want to do the check in or I'm happy to if you're working up to it? I totally understand. Um, do you want to take today's and I'll do tomorrow's? Maybe, um, I've got it, some hackpad that I dropped in there early just for kind of notes about the event. So I'll just do a mention everyone and just say, hey, that's good to do an update. Feel free to drop in what you're working on. Uh, just a little bit. This is your one minute one for the demos. I hope everyone's ready. I'll be back in a minute. Yeah, I went, sorry. Uh, I can, uh, I just don't feel like I know what other people are working on in issues. I can say what I was working on, but that feels a little self centered. Um, I think everyone's kind of like tripping away at something. Uh, sorry, my sense is like Mr. Grog is immediately available. Uh, like Muck is immediately available. That one seems to be like there. So, um, Thank you all so much for being here. So it was a little, a little terrain is a fun, fast paced, tunic live event to hack and build the projects for healthy internet. And we've been seeing so many things happening for the past, I don't know, 12 longer than that hours. I'm really excited to hear what's happening here in North America and South America. So if you're not on the EECA file already, go over there. It's shared on the screen and add your update. 60 ish. I want to hear what all of you have been working on. I'm super excited. So we're going to go right into the demos. First up on the list is page parser. Let me change cameras for you. Okay. Hello. Um, I'm Madda. So today we are working on page parser, which is, um, a tool to annotate genome through bacteria. So we're interested in the CRISPR system, which is this really cool new system that bacteria can have. And, uh, this product is kind of a combination of analysis and, um, like presenting data and more of these go away. So, hey. So this is everything, by the way. So this is, hey, Seattle, can you meet yourself? Thanks, Ben. And over the course of the sprint, we're going to be working on a couple different things. So, uh, we're working on some signs. So for example, we're working on some scripts that will help us figure out what CRISPR type the bacteria has. So that's a couple of these here. And we've made some progress on some interesting things. So we have a database, and it has things like, uh, repeat sequences in it. It's basic sequences. And we have an API that you can access the database. So, yeah, I think we can click on one of these things. Okay. Oh, no. Okay. Anyway. It's sort of crazy. Um, and something else we're working on is, um, setting up a few demos. And the kind of analysis we can do with the database and the data we're presenting. So here's an example. Um, so this starts with the database, the data put in it. And then down here we get to a graph that shows distribution of the length of CRISPR space, which means spaces are the pieces of the virus DNA that the bacteria samples. And so you can see it's, uh, kind of belching. Um, average space graph. Come check us out. See what the issues we have, uh, getting to this graph. Is that the same thing? No? Okay. Cool. Um, people help you during a sprint. So, we're talking about, um, front-end stuff a little bit too. Like, um, these are the way I have no experience with this. So if anyone's interested in discussing, like, possible use cases or, like, how we should make this usable by people, you'll be able to chat with them. That's great. Yay. Thanks, Madeline. Thank you so much. Um, up next we have ice space and women's hackathon, cybers and researchers at Arizona with Maggie Mello and Blake Joyce. Um, Tucson, Arizona, I think. Well, I'm going to be talking about is the women's tech makers to some hackathon. It has been going on now and for the first two years it was open up for, um, extending to women, women-identified makers. But this year we're kind of shaking it up a little bit. Like, who brought a show? And what we're doing is we're actually opening it up to all gender identities because that's what's happening by disability. And so we're thinking about what kind of workshops we might have last year because we tracked coding, record prototyping, and actualization. We're thinking about keynote speakers. And pretty much we're at this moment where we're open to feedback in terms of how we can shape this in a way that hasn't been shaped in a way we've known for the past two years. Also, if you're interested in maybe, like, I was doing a workshop, maybe you're a keynote speaker and you're like, you know, I have something to say at this event, please let us know and we'd be happy to connect with you. So, some issues that's now open right now in the repository, including small tour videos, any ideas you have around, like, designs for maintaining ideation activities, workshops, facilitators, and all that great stuff. So anything you want to contribute, we'd love to hear. My name is Roy. I work for the group called Cybers, where we are a national science fuzzation, a fuzzation in our main organization. We deliver cyber infrastructure most frequently to research scientists. So I have worked known as a co-curious biologist, and I work with lots of biology curious coverage. We meet in the middle to deliver a lot of stuff to... In the biology, you've got a lot of the western sciences world, so generally coding is not hard, though that is tricky for us. And so we help to bridge a lot of these gaps. So we're doing this work. We have coding, you know. Yeah, satellite organizations. So we're US based. We're based here at Tucson. We have partners at Texas Advanced. They're constant, and we have another coach for our labs in Long Island, New York. And so we also have system organizations that are spreading up. So they just start with Cybers UK, and two years to this most of Europe, and the UK. So we have a number of things that we're doing. We're doing a documentation update, and moving that from a conference with me to, you know, a research style documentation to how to make it accessible to the general and to other biologists and scientists. And we have a very whole slew of things that we're always doing. We also help to host a conversation called research that was all on our zone. And so that's part of how we all know each other as well. It's a peer-to-peer training group that got started in Australia. And we were actually doing an Australian version of our trip on all this as well. So we started that as a way to basically support people who have lots of computational research that's here. So there's another point about that, as far as statements. And we help to interact with people so we're always looking for an outsider or to be talked to, or to have people give talks, and introduce people to a lot of our computation, so that we can really reach across these different disciplines, just like science, not just biology, not just the hard sciences or some sciences, but that gives us an opportunity to really reach out to these kind of discriminative groups working on that. That's awesome. Also, quick reminder, if you're not speaking to these mutes on the video link, but thank you so much, both Maggie and you're getting a question in the ether pads, we can go ahead and answer that to your re-rolling. That would be awesome. Thank you so much. One is with Elizabeth Stillman with Open Data, Open Minds. Elizabeth, are you okay? I am, I'm right here. Thanks. Can you tell us a bit about your project? Yeah, so this is the first time we've done the Vizela Global Sprint, so this is all very exciting. And our project is a way for way to get communities to tell science stories about their own local environment, whether it's environmental or civic stories. And I'm going to just show you some of the materials and ways to get involved now, so I'm just going to switch over and let's see. Do you have a nice screen? Will that be? You should be able to tell us. Okay. I'll stop sharing my screen. Here we go. That's great, thanks. Okay, thank you. So this is our GitHub page, and it just describes what we're working on. And basically we have a series of paper circuit, circuitry projects, so paper circuitry worksheets and some hardware that allows people to create their own science notebooks. And we've been doing this work for a couple of years now. You can find a little bit about who we are. What we're looking for is people who love to work with data who are really great at statistics, educators and then some people to work on hardware. I thought I'd show you a little bit about the materials because it can be a little bit hard to understand what I'm talking about in the abstract. So what we do is we do a lot of things where kids put circuitry right into their paper notebooks. And then, so these are just some demos that we have of how to do really basic circuits. Then what we do is we use these to create pretty unbopinative objects. I'm just going to get to the right page here. That allows this is our website if you want to take a look. That allow learners to kind of create their own notebooks. You can see all of the activity worksheets right in our repository here. And these are all also available on our website. So these are how people make the activities. And then what we're doing is we're storyboarding the particular new activities for the hardware and we're asking people if they have ideas about how to use this to generate their own storyboards. We also have some description of the technology. So we have this thing that says pigeons versus seals as a counter where you can do animal counting. This is an actuated notebook where for some pages you can do visualizations over here. This is a project type right here so that's probably something in it. But what we're doing is we're going from these separate worksheets that I showed you in this folder here to putting them together into one notebook like what I showed you over here. So it's pretty well explained on this it's all on our README page and then all the issues that we have all of the things we want people to get involved with are listed out in our issues. So we're looking for help with putting our next part of the funding getting feedback on our evaluation plan commenting on our education and older tutorials. This would be a great one for this community suggesting data sources that we could use and how to use them. The user stories that I just showed you an example of. We have an example of a fully fleshed out one that's what I showed you and then we also have this sort of one set of ideas that if you wanted to develop you could. We're particularly doing a unit on fracking so we need to find some nice data on fracking that we can make usable for communities that's another thing. I have one more thing that I'm going to put up momentarily and that's help with what's going to be our online data interface and we are constraining the ways that people can ask questions and then we're hoping to do it in such a way that we can make coming up with analysis kind of a drag and drop a drag and drop ability we're calling it our if-is-the-mat interface. I put a little more information up for that to make sense because right now it's just a spreadsheet that only makes sense to me but if you're interested in that get in touch and I'd love to talk to you about it because I have had no one to talk to about this particular part yet. So yeah that's what I've got and I can't wait to contribute to other people's projects and hear from people about open data open minds. That's amazing Elizabeth. Yeah I love how slushed out your reading and your review is. It's a great work there. I've got to mention if anyone has any questions or any speakers you can put them in the e-mail that's a good spot where people can answer your questions and yeah thank you so much Elizabeth that was great. I'm also working with Drew Wilson who stepped out and now he's on one of those screens that makes it easy to get tax information to contribute. So this is our office work and any questions organizations and we want to be able to map that so we have questions like where are the people from here and that's all the information is selected Dan are you working I guess we're like in public so maybe don't say your exact address I'm like legit whispering like as quietly as possible. Yeah this is my usual office workspace. Rough go dude. I think technology hates you today Dan. No audio no power. It always annoys me when rebooting is the solution because it really shouldn't be we should be better than that now but I'll take it. New power cord you got to reboot I mean it's obvious right. Yeah right. Brandon this is the one part of this machine that I definitely understand. Where the juice comes from. The electrons. I've got that part. Conductors. You're way too qualified to speak to the electrons. The inside is a black box we don't know what happens on the inside. So good. Don that we're hearing in the background there or is that just someone who sounds like Don? Don's not on our content. I was going to say man you've got to see this Kubernetes stuff it's mind blowing. I'm so pumped. Cool. I feel like there's a lot there. A lot of there there. Yeah Matt, cross your computer. I have a happy cat down here. Nobody appreciates work for home days like the cat. So pay attention to the cat day. Do you have anywhere from home days? I usually try about one a week. Typically you're in Dumbo now? In our big co-working space thing. I could avoid speaking in loud tones. There's a lot of people in this room. But yeah so I think for our drivers too we're going to do this like circle CI integration with Kubernetes being on the end of it so it'll circle if the test path that puts a container on Docker Hub and then Docker Hub pulls that uh Yeah and so the nice thing there is then people can deploy by just pushing master. Nobody ever has to deal with anything else. Have you ever seen, this is a little bit of an aside I'm not suggesting this is a priority but have you ever seen something that can spin up an underpowered deployment per PR branch? Yes actually Heroku Pipelines is really good for that. It's a really really nice version of that where it'll listen to specific branches and run like your QA environment type thing. That's a little bit of a problem for completely open projects because it's exploitable I guess. Well you can configure which end to pull from so you can say only from the branch or whatever but yeah it is an issue. But I mean the cost if you keep that machine like a hobby or pretty low like it'll actually be free to run right? So it's not that big a deal. Right. Where are you right now Pat? I can't figure it out. I assume you're not allowed back in Starbucks anymore. I'm going to keep running that joke. Oh man it also has an office intro. That's fun. I guess I could have tried to go to some New York there's probably some New York hack location but I'm nominally also. I'm here. I'm not I'm not enough of a player apparently. Yeah we ran into this huge issue where we're running all these microservices for archivers then like they now need to talk across each other. So I needed another port opens just to do an RPC call to a different service and it was like no go on Roku at all. It won't let me have an extra port to talk on. So now that's the straw that breaks the camel's back. What do you mean I can't just have root and then SSH port? Exactly. Good and bad. Do you think Kuroku, it seems like Kuroku found a decent way of abstraction like the right amount of power and lack there. Oh yeah I think it's fantastic as long as you're not doing anything too like my starting point is always Kuroku and then I would grow it only when you need to because this is going to be two days of my life just getting a setup and then getting an SSH port. Exactly. But so far I'm finding Kubernetes is the least crappy of all of them. It's like pretty reasonable work. I'm going to do the same. It's a very bad picture. That's better. Hello. That's me. Hello. Hey I don't know if anyone's actually anyone here? Okay cool. What do you think of just doing quick like I don't know we're probably at like the next capacity I know a lot of us know each other but not everyone. Like do you guys mind doing introductions? What's that about? Just haze? Cool. So yeah I'll go first. I'm Patrick. I'm working with Matt in Toronto doing the weekly hack nights and trying to fill Don's tiny but large shoes and helping to coordinate some aspects of technical development with edgy. Interesting collaborative things from a distance remotely. That's me. Left or right? Brendan. Hi Brendan. Yeah I guess so. Okay first thing I'm going to figure out a lot of things. Good. So my name is Brendan. I think Conrad are you the only person I haven't met yet? Probably. Yeah. So I work on the archiving working group at edgy as well as mainly involved in the archiver stuff lots of stuff but trying to help as much as possible. Yeah I don't know hang out. I do a Pat Con who tells me to do. So I guess Conrad's next. Okay. I'm Conrad. I'm new. I met up with Pat Con like a month ago at the Civic Tech Nights in Toronto. So I've just been seeing him every week and he just shows me what to do and then he told me to come here so I came here. Sounds like order to read. So I guess today I guess. Yeah. Hello I'm next on your screen. Okay. Hi my name is Dan. I am Dallin on the swag and Dan will be on on github. Today I'm mainly hanging out doing day job work in the background because I work at the department of energy and can't do this all day today but I'm happy to float around and answer questions. Something I'm working on now that I posted in the dev channel is going through a list of changes to web pages that the monitoring team that's been doing this manually has found to be at least substantial. Only about 17 have turned out to be really significant and worth awarding reporters about but about 300 have been worth a closer look and so I'm going to extract those from the database and then try and publish a zip file of that content for people to play with and analyze and learn from. Yeah so Matt's next uh Can you guys hear me? Oh excellent. I'm Matt. Everybody on this call knows who I am. I'm not going to say another thing so there. Rob you're the final one Finally me. I'm Rob I've been working on some of the web monitoring stuff for the last couple months I guess and so I'm here happy to help get anybody an intro because it's like four projects and it's a little hard to wrap your brain around so happy to help people get started on that and then mostly focusing right now today on code reviews for Dan Alan and for Kevin that I should have gotten. Cool thanks Rob Yeah thanks everyone maybe just I know maybe this would have been more sensible to do before we did introductions but if anyone has any extra bandwidth I it would be awesome I'm just going to tweet I'm going to retweet with maybe we can like set off some Twitter algorithms and like get a couple more get more new folks in here so maybe I will find a link to share I'll paste it in chat and then I'll find everyone's Twitter handles so you can all just easily click and retweet without too much work so yeah just watch the chat and then I'll let everyone get back to more productive things as opposed to social media Hey guys the Google Summer of Code student Janak just pinged me on Slack so I invited him to come hang out he might pop in here any minute I'm not sure what time it is there I'm sure it's not a great time but he seems to be up Hey Just drop in and say hi to everyone I was kind of late here Hey Janak Janak what's up How much I don't know if everyone knows me but excuse me GSOC students and people and working with the dev team and sort of trying to you know prioritize changes for the analyst so it's not a tough job for them and I'm sorry about that I have a not really well so yeah just nice to meet everyone and I guess I'll be one of these in the future and probably stay there for longer it's kind of late here so I'm just gonna I thought I'd just drop in for a quick hi so nice to meet everyone Yeah man no that's red we're just all kind of mostly sitting here silent and piping up when we have questions kind of thing so don't be awkward if you if it seems like you got really quiet after you spoke like it's kind of like our default right now yeah do people want to put faces with names for them real quick and say hi we've chatted before but yeah yeah maybe just I'll do left to right again so Brandon Hey I'm B5 on Slack you may have seen me a little bit here and there it's a pleasure to meet you closer to real life but yeah I work a bunch on the archiving working group with edgy just developing tools for web archiving yeah and it's great to see the stuff you're doing on gstock I've been following along on github and Slack and it's super exciting stuff and yeah welcome to the team thank you nice to meet you finally Conrad you're next on my screen hi Johnak I'm Conrad I just started with this project pretty recently I think I killed Patrick's ears just now I just started it's nice to meet you and I hope to be working more with you in the future hi Conrad hi sorry fighting with technology here so we've hung out on video tests before okay I can't hear anything with these headphones but I'm Matt I work at U of T with edgy and mostly like in I'd say like coordinating and translating tech stuff for people who are not so technical so I'm excited to meet you and Rob you're last Hey Johnak I'm Rob also Mr. Ogrorg working on Slack and github and Twitter and all the things so yeah I'm working on like DB and UI stuff great to have you participating also okay thank you everyone nice to meet you all and I guess I probably have spoken to a few of you already on I guess Slack and github and since I think I'm very sorry about that I've been going on with the work and sort of I look forward to learning from all of you and working with you until you know making this a successful project for me and of course edgy so I think I'm going to let you all work and because I can't really speak for too long I'm going to and it's kind of late here as you can see from the lights and also I'm going to just go and let you all do the great work you are okay yeah so have a good day I suppose yeah see you later man I'm so pumped you could join for a minute that's awesome yeah me too yeah that seems great I hope it starts okay does anyone know how many time zones there are in India there's an ignorant question Google will answer the question time in India but yeah that's wild that's wild I mean it's less crazy than China which is also just one I don't know when I was into bed it was ridiculous because everything was just sort of like two hours behind because they're on Beijing time I guess the reason that Chicago is in the same time zone as DC is related to the world war Chicago is one behind oh I'm sorry Detroit Detroit and so Detroit is like the daylight is very strange in Detroit because they want to be tank and manufacturing plants to be on the same time as DC that's wild history for the wind well and we inherited that too in Canada right so like some of those time zones follow just like the vertical so if you ever look at the map it kind of goes like er silly I say in Canada talking to from New York to three people who are in Canada whatever so what you're saying is that Canada we just imported the U.S. time zones I don't remember yeah but our money is different colors that's a we rebel team I'm gonna roll out for a bit cool CMP5 see you guys at 630 yep