NumPy & SciPy with Travis Oliphant
Eric Anderson (@ericmander) and Travis Oliphant (@teoliphant) take a far-reaching tour through the history of the Python data community. Travis has had a hand in the creation of many open-source projects, most notably the influential libraries, NumPy and SciPy, which helped cement Python as the standard for scientific computing. Join us for the story of a fledgling community from a time “before open-source was cool,” and their lessons for today’s open-source landscape. In this episode we discuss: How biomedical engineering, MRIs, and an unhappy tenure committee led to NumPy and SciPy Overcoming early challenges of distribution with Python What Travis would have done differently when he wrote NumPy Successfully solving the “two-option split” by adding a third option Community-driven open-source interacting with company-backed open-source Links: NumPy SciPy Anaconda Quansight Conda Matplotlib Enthought TensorFlow PyTorch MXNet PyPi Jupyter pandas People mentioned: Guido van Rossum (@gvanrossum) Robert Kern (Github: @rkern) Pearu Peterson (Github: @pearu) Wes McKinney (@wesmckinn) Charles Harris (Github: @charris) Francesc Alted (@francescalted) Fernando Perez (@fperez_org) Brian Granger (@ellisonbg) Other episodes: TensorFlow with Rajat Monga
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