Singularity/Apptainer User Manuals
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Singularity/Apptainer is a free and open-source container platform that allows users to build and run containers on high performance computing resources.
SingularityCE is the community edition of Singularity maintained by Sylabs, a company that also offers commercial Singularity products and services.
Apptainer is a fork of Singularity, maintained by the Linux foundation, a community of developers and users who are passionate about open source software.
Termius - Modern ssh platform
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**Termius: The Modern SSH Client for 2023**
Termius is the future-facing SSH client that's redefining remote server access in 2023. Designed for ease and efficiency, Termius offers a seamless connection experience across all devices, be it mobile or desktop. Gone are the days of re-inputting IP addresses, ports, and passwords; with Termius, one-click connectivity is the new norm.
**How Termius Elevates Remote Server Access:**
1. **One-Click Connectivity:** Save the hassle of remembering and re-entering connection details. Termius provides an immediate connection to your infrastructure with a single click.
2. **Synchronized Across Devices:** Termius ensures that your data, connection settings, and preferences are consistent across all your devices, from mobile to desktop.
3. **Unparalleled Security:** With the Cloud Vault feature, users can securely store their data in an encrypted environment, accessible only from their specific devices. Shared vaults allow for safe connection sharing within teams.
4. **AI-Powered Terminal Experience:** Advanced AI-driven autocomplete means users can input command descriptions, and Termius will swiftly convert them into accurate bash commands, simplifying and enhancing the terminal interaction.
5. **Collaborative Troubleshooting:** Share terminal sessions with teammates, facilitating cooperative problem-solving or knowledge sharing. No additional server-side installations needed.
6. **Automation and Snippets:** Streamline routine processes with the ability to save and run frequently used shell scripts. Sharing these Snippets with your team can lead to increased productivity and fewer manual errors.
7. **All-Device Compatibility:** Whether on iPad, iPhone, Android, macOS, Windows, or Linux, Termius ensures a consistent and fluid experience. The platform's synchronization capability means you're always ready to respond swiftly, irrespective of the device in use.
For professionals and businesses aiming for top-notch server access efficiency, Termius is the gold standard in 2023. Experience the revolution in SSH connectivity and optimize your workflow with Termius.
GIS: Projections and their distortions
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In GIS, projections are helpful to take something plotted on a globe and convert it to a flat map that we can print or show on a screen. Unfortunately it also introduces distortions to the objects and features on the map. This not only distorts the objects visually, but the results for any spatial attribute calculations will also reflect this distortion (such as distance and area ). Below is a link to a quick primer on projections, types of distortions that can occur, and suggestions on how to choose a correct projection for your work.
Beautiful Soup - Simple Python Web Scraping
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This package lets you easily scrape websites and extract information based on html tags and various other metadata found in the page. It can be useful for large-scale web analysis and other tasks requiring automated data gathering.
AI Institutes Cyberinfrastructure Documents: SAIL Meeting
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Materials from the SAIL meeting (https://aiinstitutes.org/2023/06/21/sail-2023-summit-for-ai-leadership/). A space where AI researchers can learn about using ACCESS resources for AI applications and research.
R for Data Science
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R for Data Science is a comprehensive resource for individuals looking to harness the power of the R programming language for data analysis, visualization, and statistical modeling. Whether you're a beginner or an experienced data scientist, this guide will help you unlock the full potential of R in the realm of data science.
A survey on datasets for fairness-aware machine learning
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The research paper provides an overview of various datasets that have been used to study fairness in machine learning. It discusses the characteristics of these datasets, such as their size, diversity, and the fairness-related challenges they address. The paper also examines the different domains and applications covered by these datasets.
Handwritten Digits Tutorial in PyTorch
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This tutorial is essentially the "hello world" of image recognition and feed-forward neural network (using PyTorch). Using the MNIST database (filled within images of handwritten digits), the tutorial will instruct how to build a feed-forward neural network that can recognize handwritten digits. A solid understanding of feed-forward and back-propagation is recommended.
Contributing cycles to the Open Science Grid
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Application Fundamentals (Android)
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The provided text discusses various aspects of Android app development fundamentals. It covers key concepts related to app components, the AndroidManifest.xml file, and app resources. Android apps are built using various components, including Activities, Services, Broadcast Receivers, and Content Providers. These components serve different purposes and have distinct lifecycles. Activities are used for user interaction, services for background tasks, broadcast receivers for system-wide event handling, and content providers for managing shared data.The AndroidManifest.xml file is essential for declaring app components, permissions, and other settings. It informs the Android system about the app's components and capabilities. For instance, it specifies the minimum API level, declares hardware and software requirements, and defines intent filters to enable components to respond to specific actions.It's crucial to declare app requirements, such as device features and minimum Android API levels, to ensure compatibility with different devices and configurations. These declarations help in filtering the app's availability on Google Play for users with compatible devices.Android apps rely on resources separate from code, including images, layouts, strings, and more. These resources are stored in various directories and can be tailored for different device configurations. Providing alternative resources allows for optimization across different languages, screen sizes, orientations, and other factors.
Understanding these fundamentals is essential for developing Android applications effectively, ensuring compatibility, and providing a consistent user experience across a wide range of devices and configurations.
Git Branching Workflow and Maneuvers
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A couple of resources that:
1.) Presents and defends a git branching workflow for stable collaborative git based projects. ("A Successful Git Branching Model")
2.) Maps "What do you want to do?" to the commands necessary to accomplish it. ("Git Flight Rules")
Natural Language Processing with Deep Learning
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CS244N is a renowned natural language processing course offered by Stanford University and taught by Christopher Manning. It covers a wide range of topics in NLP, including language modeling, machine translation, sentiment analysis, and more. It teaches both foundational concepts and cutting-edge research to gain a comprehensive understanding of NLP techniques and applications.
Paraview UArizona HPC links (advanced)
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These links take you to visualization resources supported by the University of Arizona's HPC visualization consultant ([rtdatavis.github.io](http://rtdatavis.github.io/)). The following links are specific to the Paraview program and the workflows that have been used my researchers at the U of Arizona. These links are distinct from the others posted in the beginner paraview access ci links from the University of Arizona in that they are for more complex workflows. The links included explain how to use the terminal with paraview (pvpython), and the steps to leverage HPC resources for headless batch rendering. The batch rendering tutorial is significantly more complex than the others so if you find yourself stuck please post on the https://ask.cyberinfrastructure.org/ and I will try to troubleshoot with you.
What is VPN? How It Works, Types of VPN
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A VPN, or Virtual Private Network, is a technology that creates a secure tunnel between your device and a VPN server. This tunnel encrypts all of your traffic, making it unreadable to anyone who tries to intercept it.
ACCESS Support Portal
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GPU Computing Workshop Series for the Earth Science Community
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GPU training series for scientists, software engineers, and students, with emphasis on Earth science applications.
The content of this course is coordinated with the 6 month series of GPU Training sessions starting in Februrary 2022. The NVIDIA High Performance Computing Software Development Kit (NVHPC SDK) and CUDA Toolkit will be the primary software requirements for this training which will be already available on NCAR's HPC clusters as modules you may load. This software is free to download from NVIDIA by navigating to the NVHPC SDK Current Release Downloads page and the CUDA Toolkit downloads page. Any provided code is written specifically to build and run on NCAR's Casper HPC system but may be adapted to other systems or personal machines. Material will be updated as appropriate for the future deployment of NCAR's Derecho cluster and as technology progresses.
Resource to active inference
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Active inference is an emerging study field in machine learning and computational neuroscience. This website in particular introduces "active inference institute", which has established a couple of years ago, and contains a wide variety of resources for understanding the theory of active inference and for participating a worldwide active inference community.
A guide to pip in Python
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pip stands for "pip installs packages". It's the go-to package manager for Python, allowing developers to install, update, and manage software libraries and dependencies used in Python projects. With just a few commands in your terminal or command prompt, pip makes it effortless to fetch libraries from the Python Package Index (PyPI) and integrate them into your projects. This guide will walk you through the basics of pip, from installation to advanced package management.
Rockfish at Johns Hopkins University
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Resources and User Guide available at Rockfish
R for Research Scientists
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A book for researchers who contribute code to R projects: This booklet is the result of my work with the Social Cognition for Social Justice lab. It was developed in response to questions I was getting from students; both grad students that were making software design decisions, and undergraduates who were using things like version control for the first time. Although many tutorials and resources exist for these topics, there was not a single source that I thought covered just enough material to build up to the workflow used by the lab without extraneous detail.
QGIS Processing Executor
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Running QGIS tools from the command line
CMake Tutorials
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CMake is an open-source tool used to manage the build process in operating systems. This tutorial takes you through how to use CMake from the very basics with example projects.
Linux Tutorial from Ryan's Tutorials
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The following pages are intended to give you a solid foundation in how to use the terminal, to get the computer to do useful work for you. You won't be a Unix guru at the end but you will be well on your way and armed with the right knowledge and skills to get you there if that's what you want (which you should because that will make you even more awesome). Here you will learn the Linux command line (Bash) with our 13 part beginners tutorial. It contains clear descriptions, command outlines, examples, shortcuts and best practice. At first, the Linux command line may seem daunting, complex and scary. It is actually quite simple and intuitive (once you understand what is going on that is), and once you work through the following sections you will understand what is going on. Unix likes to take the approach of giving you a set of building blocks and then letting you put them together. This allows us to build things to suit our needs. With a bit of creativity and logical thinking, mixed in with an appreciation of how the blocks work, we can assemble tools to do virtually anything we want. The aim is to be lazy. Why should we do anything we can get the computer to do for us? The only reason I can think of is that you don't know how (but after working through these pages you will know how, so then there won't be a good reason). A question that may have crossed your mind is "Why should I bother learning the command line? The Graphical User Interface is much easier and I can already do most of what I need there." To a certain extent you would be right, and by no means am I suggesting you should ditch the GUI. Some tasks are best suited to a GUI, word processing and video editing are great examples. At the same time, some tasks are more suited to the command line, data manipulation (reporting) and file management are some good examples. Some tasks will be just as easy in either environment. Think of the command line as another tool you can add to your belt. As always, pick the best tool for the job.
Python
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Python course offered by Texas A&M HPRC
MDAnalysis - Python library for the analysis of molecular dynamics simulations
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MDAnalysis is a python based library of tools for the analysis of molecular dynamics simulations. It is able to read and write many popular simulation formats including CHARMM, LAMMPS, GROMACS, and AMBER and more. This link contains the documentation pages of all MDAnalysis functions and has links to tutorials using Jupyter Notebooks.