-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 189
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Clarify relationship with Project Pythia on the Pangeo website #866
Comments
@rabernat: Absolutely, and in fact, I would say that we need to do the reverse, too. The Pythia website should mention Pangeo and point to Pangeo, too. I don't think there is any fear that the two efforts will wander away from each other, but I do think we should make the tie explicit. (As a side note, I think this was just an oversight on our part, and one that the sudden interest in Pythia thanks to AGU and AMS has highlighted. I think, and hope, it is a quick fix.) |
Sounds great Kevin! I'm looking at the pythia foundations book. It is an awesome 0-60 introduction to the stack. I'm wondering if there is scope within Pythia to go to the next level: scaling out to big data with dask and Pangeo deployments? Is that something you want to include? I think Pangeo folks would be keen to contribute. Alternatively, that material could continue to live in other locations like http://gallery.pangeo.io/repos/pangeo-data/pangeo-tutorial-gallery/ |
It is absolutely something we want to include! And we are currently discussing how to deploy our own BinderHub with Dask capability (like 2i2c) to deploy these. I'm not sure if we can leverage an existing Pangeo 2i2c hub, or if we should deploy our own, but I lean toward going with 2i2c because they have the experience that we do not. |
So binder.pangeo.io is currently down due to abuse by crypto miners (see pangeo-data/pangeo-binder#195 for the sad story). When it comes back (under 2i2c operation, hopefully within a few months), it will likely be more like https://hub.aws-uswest2-binder.pangeo.io/, with a github login required. Given the effort involved in running a binderhub (particularly given the constant threat of crypto-minders), I feel like it makes sense to minimize the number of deployments. It would be great if Pythia and Pangeo could be using the same binderhub for demos that require dask gateway and / or enhanced resources (e.g. memory). It would be great to align on this. I personally would love it if NCAR / Pythia would just own binder.pangeo.io, because it would be one less thing for me to worry about! 😉 But we should chat about this and try to find a solution that makes sense for everybody. |
😄 I think that would be cool, too. At the moment, I'm not sure who to get in the room to decide that one. Our ability to deploy in the cloud is still pretty muddled. (This is mostly due to lack of a defined policy about how to pay for cloud services without reimbursing personal credit cards.) But I think these issues are being ironed out. Slowly. |
@rabernat Thanks for the ping and I echo @clyne and @kmpaul's comments. We'll be holding our biweekly Education Working Group meeting tomorrow, and I expect that you'll soon be seeing some PR's to our Foundations and Pythia website repos. Additionally, we've specifically addressed Pythia's links to and inspiration from Pangeo in our soon-to-be-submitted SciPy'22 abstract. |
This issue has been automatically marked as stale because it has not had recent activity. It will be closed if no further activity occurs. Thank you for your contributions. |
This issue has been automatically closed because it had not seen recent activity. The issue can always be reopened at a later date. |
Following todays SC meeting, I am making a note of the idea of formalizing project Pythia as the "official" education / onboarding channel for Pangeo and pointing to it via our website.
The idea for Pythia emerged at least partially from the new defunct POETs (Pangeo Outreach Education and Training efforts) working group. So I have been thinking about it as closely related to the Pangeo effort. On the website, Pythia is described as "formerly the education working group".
However, if you go look at the Pythia website, there is no mention of Pangeo whatsoever. (Neither in the pythia foundations book.) So perhaps have I have been misunderstanding this relationship.
I'm pinging @kmpaul and @ktyle for some feedback on this. Is it okay if we point to Pythia as the go-to educational resource for Pangeo?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: