RSE
RSE steht für research software engineering!
Dieses Jahr gibt es einen eigenen Track, den die Research Software Engineers mit Leben füllen. Es geht um die Herausforderung, Software im Forschungsalltag mit allen Facetten zu erstellen, auszuführen und zu warten. Mehr zur RSE-Gemeinschaft kann man bei https://de-rse.org lesen.
Mittwoch (23.02) - Raum Schniecke - Greetings + Engineering I
11:00 – 12:30; Link zum Pad
Begrüssung der Community
A quality-based approach for research software and services
Pablo Orviz, Samuel Bernardo, Mario David, Diana Naranjo, Germán Moltó, Miguel Caballer, Isabel Campos, Jorge Gomes, Valentin Kozlov, Borja Esteban Sanchis, Marcus Hardt, Tobias Kerzenmacher, Peter Braesicke and Ignacio Blanquer
Data integration pipeline for forecasting study of Covid 19 in Sachsen and Czechia
Wildan Abdussalam, Adam Mertel, Nishant Kumar, Mansoor D. Monfared, Weronika Schlechte-Welnicz and Justin Calabrese
Mittwoch - Raum Schniecke - Policies and Organisation
13:30 – 15:00; Link zum Pad
The ITC Knowledge Hub
Markus Konkol
OpenSource im Spannungsfeld akademischer und wirtschaftlicher Interessen
Fabian Schlegel, Tobias Huste, Guido Juckeland and Uwe Konrad
Helmholtz Federated IT Services: Innovative Cloud- und Software-Dienste für die Wissenschaft
Uwe Konrad, Tobias Huste, Uwe Jandt and Tobias Schlauch
Mittwoch - Raum Schniecke - Directory + Lightning Talks
15:30 - 16:30; Link zum Pad
HERMES: Automated software publication with rich metadata
Stephan Druskat, Oliver Bertuch, Oliver Knodel, Guido Juckeland, Carina Becker and Tobias Schlauch
Applying Continuous Integration to Earth System Modelling: Challenges and Successes
Paul Gierz, Dirk Barbi, Miguel Andres-Martinez, Deniz Ural, Bernadette Fritzsch and Natalja Rakowsky
Enabling extended collaborative research in crystallography with Amarcord.
Jerome Carnis, Philipp Middendorf, Henry Chapman, Martin Domaracky and Luca Gelisio
Morpheus model repository: Platform for citable multi-scale and multicellular models in systems biology
Jörn Starruß, Robert Müller, Diego Jahn, Walter de Back, Andreas Deutsch and Lutz Brusch
Donnerstag - Raum Schniecke - Sustainability + HPC
11:00 - 12:30; Link zum Pad
Making use of established codes instead of re-inventing the wheel: Using lattice-based methods from waLBerla into ESPResSo
Jean-Noël Grad, Rudolf Weeber, Markus Holzer and Christian Holm
SURESOFT: Towards Sustainable Research Software
Sven Marcus, Sören Peters and Jan Linxweiler
Supporting RSE workflows on HPC-Systems
René Caspart
Donnerstag - Raum Schniecke - Engineering II
13:30 - 15:00; Link zum Pad
Painless binary distribution for Python packages
Dominic Kempf
Pipelines for text annotation - developing software for digital humanities
Inga Ulusoy
Fuzzing Computational Material Science Code Parsers
Sebastian Müller and Jan Arne Sparka
Donnerstag - Raum Schniecke - Poster Session
15:30 - 16:00
Lightning Talk/Poster in break out room 1
Applying Continuous Integration to Earth System Modelling: Challenges and Successes
Paul Gierz, Dirk Barbi, Miguel Andres-Martinez, Deniz Ural, Bernadette Fritzsch and Natalja Rakowsky
Poster in break out room 2
Enabling extended collaborative research in crystallography with Amarcord.
Jerome Carnis, Philipp Middendorf, Henry Chapman, Martin Domaracky and Luca Gelisio
Poster in break out room 3
Morpheus model repository: Platform for citable multi-scale and multicellular models in systems biology
Jörn Starruß, Robert Müller, Diego Jahn, Walter de Back, Andreas Deutsch and Lutz Brusch
Freitag - Raum Schniecke - RSE & RDM
11:00 - 12:30; Link zum Pad
RSE and RDM - a match made in heaven
Oliver Bertuch
eWorkbench - ein universelles Werkzeug für Forschungsdatenmanagement
Katja Kessler
From sample management to workflow integration: Semantic research data management in glaciology
Florian Spreckelsen, Daniel Hornung and Johannes Freitag