Matthew Feickert

56 Followers
85 Following
91 Posts
Postdoc at University of Wisconsin-Madison Data Science Institute working on #LHC #physics and data science with the ATLAS Collaboration at CERN and IRIS-HEP.
Websitematthewfeickert.com
GitHubhttps://github.com/matthewfeickert
Twitterhttps://twitter.com/HEPfeickert
A belated happy Thanksgiving from my corner of the world to everyone. Taking moments to reflect on the many joys and opportunities of my life I continually come back to the generosity, optimism, and kindness of my mentors, colleagues, and friends. They are gifts that I cherish.
Reasons that it is important to really proofread your writing before hitting "submit": At some point in the last several weeks spellcheck thought that I meant "exploitative" instead of "explorative". Rather different when the next words is "interactions"!
Congratulations to the JetNet authors on their JOSS publication! I’m always so happy when particle physics people decide to submit to @joss (my field bias is showing) and when you have a fantastic team of researchers submitting and all star reviewers it ends up just being highly enjoyable to watch the process flow! https://fosstodon.org/@joss/111324343028502544
JOSS (@[email protected])

Just published in JOSS: 'JetNet: A Python package for accessing open datasets and benchmarking machine learning methods in high energy physics' https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.05789

Fosstodon
Just published in JOSS: 'JetNet: A Python package for accessing open datasets and benchmarking machine learning methods in high energy physics' https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.05789
JetNet: A Python package for accessing open datasets and benchmarking machine learning methods in high energy physics

Kansal et al., (2023). JetNet: A Python package for accessing open datasets and benchmarking machine learning methods in high energy physics. Journal of Open Source Software, 8(90), 5789, https://doi.org/10.21105/joss.05789

Journal of Open Source Software

The @joss editorial team is looking for new editors to join us!

https://blog.joss.theoj.org/2023/10/call-for-editors

If you're passionate about supporting open source scientific software please consider applying before 6 November, 2023! If you have questions just ask. :)

Call for editors | Journal of Open Source Software Blog

Blog for the Journal of Open Source Software • <a href='https://joss.theoj.org'>https://joss.theoj.org</a>

UWM alum works to uncover building blocks of the universe at SNOLAB - Issuu

• Jodi Cooley is the executive director of SNOLAB, an underground research facility in Ontario, Canada on par with national laboratories like Fermi Lab in the United States.

issuu
We are pleased to announce the inaugural #pyhf Users and Developers Workshop will take place at CERN 4 - 8 December, 2023! https://indico.cern.ch/event/1294577/ Registration and call for abstracts are open now, so register today!
pyhf Users and Developers Workshop 2023

What is this workshop?This is the inaugural pyhf workshop for users and developers across all of physics (following the 2023 Belle II pyhf workshop). The goals of the workshop are twofold:Gather the pyhf user community together to learn from their experience and better understand what changes will improve things for the most number of people.We expect to have contributions from:Scikit-HEPIRIS-HEPATLASCMS (sorry this conflicts with CMS week)Belle IIMicroBooNESModelSMadAnalysis 5and...

Indico
@pythonbytes @brianokken @mkennedy The work that @henryiii and other members of the Scientific Python org have done on creating a best practices guide for Python packaging and project maintence is really superb. Would be great to cover it on the podcast! https://fosstodon.org/@henryiii/111031371780663651
Henry³ (@[email protected])

Want to know the best practices for building and maintaining a #Python package? And want a template for new projects or WebAssembly-powered tooling to help existing projects? The URL for this post is finally stable, so I can now share it! https://blog.scientific-python.org/scientific-python/dev-summit-1-development-guide/

Fosstodon
Want to know the best practices for building and maintaining a #Python package? And want a template for new projects or WebAssembly-powered tooling to help existing projects? The URL for this post is finally stable, so I can now share it! https://blog.scientific-python.org/scientific-python/dev-summit-1-development-guide/
Scientific Python blog - The Scientific Python Development Guide

Posts from the Scientific Python community

@pythonbytes @brianokken @mkennedy Seems like the day has finally come for Excel users to rejoice and use Python in Excel. https://www.anaconda.com/blog/announcing-python-in-excel-next-level-data-analysis-for-all
Announcing Python in Excel: Next-Level Data Analysis for All | Anaconda

Now you can write Python code directly in Microsoft Excel’s grid—no Python installation required.

Anaconda