Sage Days 15: Seattle, WA
DATES: May 16 - 21, 2009
Schedule
Saturday, May 16: Introduction to Sage
All talks on Saturday and Sunday are in the Gates Common, room 691 in the Paul G. Allen Center, top floor.
Morning: Introductory Sage Talks
- These talks are aimed at Sage newbies, anywhere from advanced undergrads to people teaching courses on these topics who are interested in seeing Sage in action.
- 9:30AM - 10:20AM: Linear Algebra using Sage, Rob Beezer
- 10:30AM - 11:00AM: Calculus using Sage, William Stein
- 11:05AM - 11:20AM: 3D Plotting, William Cauchois
- 11:30AM - 12:20PM: Number Theory using Sage, Craig Citro
Afternoon: Advanced Topics
- 2:30PM - 3:00PM: From LaTeX to Sage and back again, Rob Beezer
3:15PM - 4:45PM: Cython, Robert Bradshaw & Craig Citro
- 5:00PM - 5:50PM: Advanced Mercurial Usage, Mike Hansen
Evening: Coding!
- 5:30PM - 6:30PM: Coding Sprint organization
- 6:30PM - ???: Coding Sprints!!!
Sunday, May 17: Research/Development
All talks on Saturday and Sunday are in the Gates Common, room 691 in the Paul G. Allen Center, top floor.
Morning
- 10:00AM - 10:50AM: Sage Status Report, William Stein
- 11:00AM - 11:50PM: Algebraic Topology and Sage, John Palmieri
Afternoon
- 2:00PM - 2:50PM: ReST/Sphinx, Mike Hansen and John Palmieri
- 3:00PM - 4:50PM: MPIR/FLINT, Bill Hart and Tom Boothby
- 5:00PM - 6:00PM: Coding Sprint Organization
- 6:00PM - ???: Coding!!!
Monday, May 18
11:00AM - 12:00PM: Sage-Combinat and Categories for the Working Mathematical Programmer, Nicolas Thiery in SCC 246
(1:30PM - 2:20PM: William's Modular Abelian Varieties class, MEB 243) -- Lecture on Computing with modular forms in Sage
(2:30PM - 3:20PM: William's undergrad Sage class, CMU B027) -- LAB/Tutorial: Writing larger Sage/Python programs
Evening: MEB 238
- 5:00PM - 6:00PM: Fredrik Johanssen: MPMath
- 6:00PM - 6:30PM: Coding Sprint Organization
Tuesday, May 19
Morning: Microsoft Research!
- 9:30AM - 2:30PM: Microsoft Research
- 9:30AM - 9:55AM: Introduction to Sage, Craig Citro
- 10:00AM - 10:25AM: Introduction to Cython, Robert Bradshaw
10:30AM - 11:00AM: IronPython: Python and .NET, Jim Hugunin
- 11:15AM - 12:00PM: sage-windows, William Stein and Dan Shumow
- 12:00PM - 2:30PM: Lunch and Discussion at MSR
4:00PM - 5:00PM: Andrei Okounkov, Sieg 134
Evening: MEB 238
- 5:15PM - 6:05PM: Yacop/Algebraic Topology in Sage, Christian Nassau
- 6:15PM - 6:45PM: Coding Sprint Organization
Wednesday, May 20
11:00AM - 5:00PM: Coding Sprints in SCC 246
- (1:30PM - 2:20PM: William's Modular Abelian Varieties class) -- Explicit modular abelian varieties
- (2:30PM - 3:20PM: William's undergrad Sage class) -- LECTURE: How I built the Sage project from the ground up
4:00PM - 5:00PM: Andrei Okounkov, Sieg 134
Evening: PAA A110
- 5:00PM - 5:30PM: Coding Sprint Organization
- 5:30PM - 7:00PM: Coding Sprints!!!
Thursday, May 21
Morning: Final Status Reports
11:00AM - 1:00PM: Final Status Reports in SCC 248
1:00PM - 5:00PM: Coding Sprints in SCC 248
4:00PM - 5:00PM: Andrei Okounkov, Sieg 134
Evening: PAA A110
- 5:00PM - 7:00PM: Last Wrap-up (for those still here)
Project Ideas
Mailing list
Video
Might be broadcast using http://www.ustream.tv
Topics
- Computational Algebraic Topology
- Porting Sage to Windows
- Number Theory
Organizers
- Michael Abshoff
- Craig Citro
- Robert Bradshaw
- Marshall Hampton
- Mike Hansen
- Bill Hart
- Matt Klassen (digipen)
- David Joyner
- William Stein
- John Palmieri
Colloquium Talks
Tuesday, May 19, 10:30am, at Microsoft Research -- Jim Hugunin (of Microsoft and lead developer of IronPython) will speak about IronPython: Python and .NET
The Fields Medalist Andrei Okounkov will speak at UW on May 19, 20, and 21 at 4pm. Here's a quote from Okounkov: "This brings up many issues. I am not an expert, but I think we need a symbolic standard to make computer manipulations easier to document and verify. And with all due respect to the free market, perhaps we should not be dependent on commercial software here. An open-source project could, perhaps, find better answers to the obvious problems such as availability, bugs, backward compatibility, platform independence, standard libraries, etc. One can learn from the success of TEX and more specialized software like Macaulay2. I do hope that funding agencies are looking into this."
Confirmed Participants
- Michael Abshoff
- Martin Albrecht
- D. Benjamin Antieau
- Shaun Ault
- Rob Beezer
- Tom Boothby
- Robert Bradshaw
- Bob Bruner (Wayne State)
- Craig Citro
- Alia Hamieh
- Marshall Hampton
- Mike Hansen
- Bill Hart
- Mike Hill
- Fredrik Johansson
- David Joyner
- Kiran S. Kedlaya
- Matt Klassen
- Karen T. Kohl
- Jerome Lefebvre
- Robert Miller
- Christian Nassau
- John Palmieri
- David Perkinson
- David Roe
- Dan Shumow
- William Stein
- Nicolas M. Thiery
- Carl Witty
Local travel info
* William Stein has already fully paid for FIVE 3-person rooms May 15 - May 22, 2009, at
The Collegiana Inn 4311 - 12th Ave. NE Seattle, WA 98105 (206) 732-3200
If you would like to stay in one of the Collegiana rooms, email wstein@gmail.com to reserve a spot. (And, you don't have to pay anything out of pocket.)
Room 1: * Alia Hamieh * Karen T. Kohl Room 2: * Carl Witty * David Roe Room 3: * D. Benjamin Antieau * Jerome LeFebvre Room 4: * Bob Bruner Room 5: * Shaun V. Ault * Nicolas Thiery
This place has rooms: http://www.collegeinnseattle.com/
There is probably a very nice studio and/or 1-bedroom available apartment that can be rented for a week here: http://www.stanfordatuw.com/
Flyer (pdf)