AMS 2008 Booth
There will be a Sage booth at the winter joint mathematics meeting in San Diego. There will be a coding sprint at the booth.
The main booth organizer is William Stein.
AMS/MAA Joint Meetings 2009 Booth
There will be a Sage booth at the winter joint mathematics meeting in Washington, DC, January 5 - 8, 2009.
Please add your name below if you are planning on attending and can help out in the booth:
- Marshall Hampton
- David Joyner
- David Harvey
- Mike Hansen
- Jason Grout
Please add your name below if you will be at the meetings, and even just plan on stopping by.
- Kiran Kedlaya
AMS Special Session on Sage and Mathematical Research Using Open Source Software
The purpose of this session is to bring together those who develop and/or use or would like to use the mathematical software system Sage and related open source software in their research. The Sage session abstracts will be published in the CCA.
Organizers
David Saunders, University of Delaware, <saunders@udel.edu>
David Harvey, New York University, <dmharvey@cims.nyu.edu>
David Joyner, U.S. Naval Academy, <wdjoyner@gmail.com>
The time slots scheduled are:
- Thursday, January 8, 2009: 8:00-10:50 AM
- Thursday, January 8, 2009: 1:00-5:50 PM
Attendees (tentative)
Jason Grout, Iowa State University <jason-sage@creativetrax.com>
- Kiran Kedlaya, MIT
Nathan Ryan <nathan.ryan@bucknell.edu>
Karl Crisman <Karl.Crisman@gordon.edu>
Gregory Bard, Fordham, <bard@fordham.edu>
Marshall Hampton <mhampton@d.umn.edu>
Qing Xiang <xiang@math.udel.edu>
Robert Miller, University of Washington, <rlmillster@gmail.com>
Dan Roche, Univ. Waterloo, droche@cs.uwaterloo.ca
AMS session webpage
Tentative schedule
8:00- 8:20 Crisman - Undergraduate research in the mathematics of voting and choice using Sage.
- 8:30- 8:50 Grout - Sage in an early-graduate research course investigating the minimum rank problem
9:00- 9:20 Harvey - zn_poly: a library for polynomial arithmetic.
- 9:30- 9:50 Roche - Fast multiplication with low space complexity.
10:00-10:20 Hampton - Solutions, bounds, and finiteness of polynomial systems in Sage.
- 10:30-10:50 Kaltofen - Rump’s model problem and the computer search for records in number theory.
- 1:00- 1:20 Ryan - Siegel modular forms in Sage.
- 1:30- 1:50 Noel - Nilpotent orbits associated to Coxeter cells.
2:00- 2:20 Joyner/Miller - Coding theory and combinatorics in Sage.
- 2:30- 2:50 Villard - Numerical analysis tools for LLL lattice basis reduction. (cancelled - sorry)
- 3:00- 3:30 break
3:30- 3:50 Bard/Miller - Ultra-sparse matrix reduction to reduced row-echelon form for matrices over GF(2)
4:00- 4:20 Xiang - Modular ranks of the adjacency matrices of strongly regular graphs arising from semifields.
- 4:30- 4:50 Saunders - On matrix rank modulo small primes.
Using Open Source Software for Undergraduate Courses
Organizers
Karl-Dieter Crisman karl.crisman@gordon.edu
Marshall Hampton mhampton@d.umn.edu
David Joyner wdj@usna.edu
Session Description
The open source software paradigm provides freely available and freely modifiable software to anyone with an internet connection, including much mathematics software. Some of the most familiar to the math community are LaTeX and the Firefox web browser, but there are many other high-quality projects as well. Two reasons this software is appropriate for use in the undergraduate curriculum are its affordability for institutions where this is a limiting factor, and the ability for advanced students with programming experience to see the inner workings of, contribute to, and improve upon software they constantly use. This panel will describe and demonstrate a variety of successful uses of open source software in contexts ranging from the introductory classroom to senior projects.
Panelists
David Joyner, US Naval Academy, Differential Equations with Sage
John Verzani, CUNY, Introductory Statistics with R
Michael Gage, University of Rochester, Webwork
- Robert Miller, University of Washington, Undergraduate Research and Open Source
MAA blurb
Using Open Source Software for Undergraduate Course, Tuesday 1:00 p.m.–2:20 p.m., organized by Karl-Dieter Crisman, Gordon College; Marshall Hampton, University of Minnesota, Duluth; and David Joyner, United States Naval Academy. The open source software paradigm provides freely available and freely modifiable software to anyone with an internet connection, including much mathematics software. Some of the most familiar to the math community are LaTeX and the Firefox web browser, but there are many other high-quality projects as well. Two reasons this software is appropriate for use in the undergraduate curriculum are its affordability for institutions where this is a limiting factor, and the ability for advanced students with programming experience to see the inner workings of, contribute to, and improve upon software they constantly use. This panel will describe and demonstrate a variety of successful uses of open source software in contexts ranging from the introductory classroom to senior projects. Panelists will include: John Verzani, CUNY, “Introductory Statistics with R”; Michael Gage, University of Rochester, WebWorK; and David Joyner, Differential Equations with Sage.