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Transform 2021

Transform 2021 rolled out

Transform 2021 rolled out

On Friday we wrapped up the 2021 edition of TRANSFORM, the Software Underground’s annual virtual conference. We stuffed a hackathon, 21 tutorials, 20 lightning talks, and an annual general meeting into a week-long celebration of open subsurface code and data.

Many thanks to our sponsors — especially Studio X in Austin, Texas — and to all of the participants who donated to the conference this year. As a pay-what-you-like event, we depend on generosity to fund the things we do. In return, we are trying to bring some new superpowers to the community. So far, so good.

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Just like last year, the event kicked off with a hackathon, which again lasted all week. The event saw 9 projects being worked on. this number included long-lived projects like Subsurface, GemGIS, SEGY-SAK and Striplogm as well as new projects looking at seismic footprint removal and well correlation, among other things. We’ll tell you all about these projects in the coming days.

The heart of the conference week itself was the 21 amazing tutorials — 33% more than we had in 2020! The instructors and presenters this year participated from all over the world:

The 29 instructors and 20 presenters this year came from all over the world.

The 29 instructors and 20 presenters this year came from all over the world.

We’re so fortunate to have scientists in our community that not only spend hours (years!) writing open source software for others to use, but then will also contribute open content to help others use it. Many, many thanks to our team of instructors:

Day 1: Ashley Russell (NOR), Claire Veillard (NOR), Florian Wagner et al (DEU), Anne Estoppey (NOR), Miguel de la Varga (DEU), Diana Acero-Allard (USA), Maria Cecilia Bravo (NOR), Michael Pyrcz (USA), Thomas Martin (USA).

Day 2: Tony Hallam (GBR), Lachlan Grose & Mark Jessop (AUS), Olawale Ibrahim (NGA), Øystein Klemetsdal (NOR), Nathaniel Jones (USA), Bane Sullivan (USA), Seogi Kang (USA).

Day 3: Jørgen Kvalsvik (NOR), Graeme Mackenzie (NOR), Edward Caunt (GBR), Steve Purves (ESP), Matteo Ravasi (SAU), Dewey Dunnington (CAN), Santi Soler (ARG), Irene Wallis (NZL), Katie McLean (NZL).

It wasn’t all Python either — one tutorial used R, another MATLAB/Octave — and we even had a tutorial in Spanish this year. We also had participants from well outside the usual petroleum-rich industries: geothermal, mining, hydrology, and technology were all represented. I hope we continue to see increased diversity in languages, industries, location, and in all dimensions.

The best thing of all, especially if you weren’t able to take part last week? Everything is on YouTube, so check it out, follow along, and learn some new tricks.

One of the really remarkable things this year was the prevalence of tutorials and hackathon projects that combined multiple software projects from the open subsurface stack (which was the goal of TRANSFORM all along). Several events combined two or more of GemPy, Devito, PyVista, Subsurface, segyio/SEGYSAK, or lasio/welly/striplog. It’s exciting and encouraging to see, and signals a new level of maturity among these tools. The future for the open subsurface stack looks bright.

Thank you to the organizing team — Dieter Werthmuller, Ashley Russell, Irene Wallis, Brendon Hall, Rob Leckenby and Sofiyah Mokhtar — for helping pull everything together.

And thank you to everyone that participated in TRANSFORM 2021. I hope you learned something new, and met someone interesting. Please tell your friends and come back next year!

News from the Underground

News from the Underground

Here’s all the news from the Underground this week…

Have you signed up for TRANSFORM 2021 yet? Because it kicks off with the hackathon next Friday 16 April. The hackathon projects are starting to take shape and there is going to be a special Rendezvous session on next Wednesday 14 April at 16.00 UTC to discuss project ideas. Come along and let the project ideas wash over you and vie for your attention.

What to learn first? — Matt created an infographic entitled, Which language should I learn first? with some opinions about how to get started in programming for science, business, and fun. There’s more context in his blog post and this thread contains some good perspectives from others. There’s quite a bit of chat on Twitter about it too.

Colour science for colouring scienceAlessandro’s posted in the #viz channel an excerpt from one of Edward Tufte’s books, appealing to those particular colour orderings that “have a natural visual hierarchy”. Check out the thread for some thoughtful considerations concerning the state of the art for colouring data.

Image modified from fabriocrameri.ch.

Image modified from fabriocrameri.ch.

Singing with the birds — Jesse shared an article in #random with the opening line, “I had a dream one night where a blackbird was talking in human language”. The article then ventures into an exploration of converting human speech into birdsong. If you’re into signal processing, acoustics, and ornithology, you’re going to think this is really cool.

As always, if you want to highlight anything in these weekly posts, message @Evan on Swung.

News from the Underground

News from the Underground

Here are the highlights from the past week.

Less than one month until Transform 2021 – The Software Underground’s T21 virtual conference is less than a month away, so it’s time to register and schedule your life during 16 – 23 April, 2021. Check out the calendar of events and make sure that you are tuned into the #t21-general channel.

SWUNG Hackathon Inside Transform – T21 kicks off with the Hackathon 16 – 18 April, but momentum from those projects will likely carry on, gathering eyeballs and contributors throughout the rest of the conference as well. In the #t21-hackathon channel, Filippo shared some instructions for proposing and discussing any would-be hackathon projects on this GitHub Discussion page.

git for you One month in advance of his tutorial on git and GitHub at T21, Thursday 22 April, Steve has set up a Q & A in slido. Talk about a tutorial that is truly in service of others! It also means that you can might still get your questions answered if you, say, get pulled too deeply into a hackathon project.

Perils of improper sanitation – Are you aware of the perils of not sanitizing your inputs? This thread in #python has some nice links to explain what this is and when you should care.

Mapping partnerships – There are those that make maps, and there are those who want to make maps of those that make maps. This post is looking about how to structure a database to create a network of co-authorship of geoscience publications.

Probabilistically going to read it – I’ve got loads of love for those who put in the extra effort to make their work open access. Take for instance, this new publication that Júlio announced yesterday: Probabilistic Knowledge-based Characterization of Conceptual Geologic Models.