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Lessons learnt from developing a multi-year RSE project #21
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I apologize for the last minute submission, I actually saw the Twitter annoucement only recently. I hope this is ok 🙏 |
dear Ghislain, thanks a lot! Nothing to apologize. Last-minute submissions is exactly what we wanted. Thank you! |
Could be after you on the 13:10 CET slot? |
@lucaferranti does the thumbs-up mean it's ok for the time slot? It's still not listed in the schedule so I am a bit confused. |
Hi @ghisvail , I was supposed to add your talk to the schedule on Friday, but I forgot. I have not opened the PR: nordic-rse/nordic-rse.github.io#397 the talk will appear on the website once the PR is merged (tomorrow morning at latest). Apologies for the weak follow-up |
No problem, thanks for confirming 👍 |
This is a proposal for a shorter version of the talk I gave at RSECon22 focusing on the lessons learnt from developing a long-running RSE project. I got loads of questions on this specific part during and after the talk, which motivated this submission.
Title of the contribution:
Lessons learnt from developing a multi-year RSE project
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Academia is operating on a set of constraints that makes sustained development of durable software particularly challenging, such as limited resources, frequent staff turnover and lack of training. In this presentation, I reflect on the journey of Clinica, a successful neuroimaging software project, which has been in development for 6 years and counting. First born as a side-project used internally at the Aramis Lab, Clinica has become a mature software project developed in the open and fostering a growing community of users. I will share the major lessons we have learnt during this successful journey and touch on various topics such as coding best practices, technical debt and project management. Although Clinica is developed in Python, most takeaways will be transferable to other projects written with a different software stack.
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