5 Years, 10 Sprints, A scikit-learn Open Source Journey
Author:
Reshama Shaikh
Video
About
We all use open source tools in various capacities, yet knowing how to contribute to open source is not as well known or accessible. The limited knowledge and education surrounding contributing to open source could be one explanation of the low participation rates by underrepresented persons in open source. Open source sprints are hands-on “workshops” or “hackathons” where contributors collaborate to resolve coding and documentation issues posted on a GitHub repository.
Reshama shares how she organized her first open source sprint in 2017, which was in-person and held in New York City. Over the next 5 years, she organized in-person sprints from San Francisco, USA to Nairobi, Kenya, as well as pivoting to online sprints due to the global pandemic. In this keynote, Reshama shares highlights, challenges and lessons learned from the sprints.
About Reshama Shaikh
Reshama is a statistician/data scientist based in New York City. She earned her M.S. in statistics from Rutgers University. She earned her M.B.A. from NYU Stern School of Business where she studied strategy, business analytics and technology management.
Reshama Shaikh is the Director of Data Umbrella. She is also on the Contributor Team for scikit-learn and PyMC and an organizer for NYC PyLadies.
Key Links
Connecting
- LinkedIn: @reshamas
- Twitter: @reshamas
- GitHub: @reshamas
- Medium: @reshamas
- Join the Data Umbrella Meetup Group
- Subscribe to the Data Umbrella YouTube
Keynote Day
#PyConDE #PyDataBerlin
I will be delivering my keynote “5 Years, 10 Sprints, a @scikit_learn Open Source Journey”
🗓️ Tuesday, Apr 12, 2022
🕙 10:30-11:15 am ET (16:30 Berlin)#opensource #MachineLearning
You can still purchase tickets for *online* here:https://t.co/dzqekTRc9o— Reshama Shaikh (@reshamas) April 11, 2022
Keynote Announcement
We are proud to announce @reshamas as keynote speaker for the conference 🥳@scikit_learn @DataUmbrella https://t.co/OnAKESqqX7
— PyConDE & PyData Berlin (@PyConDE) March 28, 2022