Draft invitation, thoughts comments? Hoping to send this out in the next 24 hours.
The Atom Probe Technical Committee invites you to join us for a virtual meeting on:
Software for enabling atom probe research
30th July 3pm to 6pm UTC/GMT
Invited speakers:
(Invited) Tim Payne (Cameca), Patrick Stender (Stuttgart), Bertand Radiguet (Rouen)
Software flash talks so far:
Paraprobe, EPOSA, AtomProbeLab, PNNL activities (Jing Wang), Test case development (Ingrid McCarroll) and 3Depict/Libatomprobe.
Plus a presentation by the Atom Probe Technical Committee’s activities
While we can’t meet together for APT&M this year, we would like to invite you to discuss software developed for and by the community: How can it make us happier, our life simpler, our research more rigorous and ideally more productive. At APT&M 2018 there was a very successful workshop on atom probe software which centred around discussion and a series of short “flash” software talks showcasing different applications. We’d like to repeat this kind of meeting virtually.
We have some invited speakers lined up to talk about activities from their respective organisations, 5-minute software flash talks (contributions welcome) and time for Q&A plus discussion.
You can sign-up on the Google form: https://forms.gle/A3PyMC6MZ58EvMLL9 which will use to contact you with the meeting joining details and you can indicate an interest to present a flash talk.
(email atompr...@gmail.com if you can’t use Google forms)
If you are confused about who the Atom Probe Technical Committee are, then please see the note at the description of this invitation!
The meeting is not meant to communicate latest scientific results achieved APT/FIM or as place to ask questions about how to use certain software, rather to present what is available and being developed.
Timing, 3 hour duration starting at:
LA 8:00-11:00
New York 11:00-14:00
UTC 15:00-18:00
London 16:00-19:00
Moscow 18:00-21:00
Beijing 23:00-2:00
Sydney 1:00-4:00 (31st July)
More about the Atom Probe Technical Committee:
Following a discussion surrounding computational methods for atom probe microscopy at APT&M 2018 in Washington, a recommendation was made by the APM community to create a technical committee (TC). This motion was supported by members of more than 20 different labs around the world. The committee is currently made up of 8 members from laboratories across the globe, meeting regularly for discussions (see https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/atomprobe-tc for a record); aiming to capture a cross-section of needs of the APM community.
Current committee members: Daniel Haley (committee chair), Anna Ceguerra, Markus Kühbach, Andrew London, Christian Oberdorfer, Bertand Radiguet, David Reinhard and Dieter Isheim.
The main objectives of the TC are to provide guidance on technical issues relating to atom probe data and atom probe microscopy:
To date, the TC has discussed issues relating to:
The TC are working to improve working conditions for all of our data and data formats, facilitating collaborative research, and improving communication. We represent a group formed by the community, working for the community to make atom probe research even easier.
Following a discussion surrounding computational methods for atom probe microscopy at APT&M 2018 in Washington, a recommendation was made by the APM community to create a technical committee (TC). This motion was supported by members of more than 20 different labs around the world. The committee is currently made up of 8 members from laboratories across the globe, meeting regularly for discussions (seehttps://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/atomprobe-tc for a record); aiming to capture a cross-section of needs of the APM community.
Current committee members: Daniel Haley (committee chair), Anna Ceguerra, Markus Kühbach, Andrew London, Christian Oberdorfer, Bertand Radiguet, David Reinhard and Dieter Isheim.The main objectives of the TC are to provide guidance on technical issues relating to atom probe data and atom probe microscopy:
- To advise the IFES steering committee and the IFES community on matters of importance that are technical in nature.
- To communicate best practices and methods for the communication and dissemination of atom-probe data, techniques and knowledge.
- To ensure that technical data and recommendations are made available publicly, in perpetuity, with no barriers to access.
To date, the TC has discussed issues relating to:
- Tools used to analyse APM data (list at: https://tinyurl.com/APM-SoftwareList)
- Increasing reproducibility of research
- “Hashing” of data sets to document and guarantee provenance
- Formation of a recommendation of FAIR principles
- A standard open-source data file (container) format
The TC are working to improve working conditions for all of our data and data formats, facilitating collaborative research, and improving communication. We represent a group formed by the community, working for the community to make atom probe research even easier.
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<Software for enabling atom probe research flyer.pdf>
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Thanks all for you prompt feedback, please see below for the updated version. Dan and I have had some discussion and re-balanced the invited talks so we don’t have a TC member as an invited talk. Dan and I will withdraw our flash talks if there is a high demand for the same reason.
The Atom Probe Technical Committee invites you to join us for a virtual meeting on:
Software for enabling atom probe research
30th July 3pm to 6pm UTC/GMT
Invited speakers:
(Invited) Tim Payne (Cameca), Patrick Stender (Stuttgart), Jens Keutgen on EPOSA
Plus a presentation by the Atom Probe Technical Committee’s activities
While we can’t meet together this year, we would like to invite you to discuss software developed for and by the community: How can it make us happier, our life simpler, our research more rigorous and ideally more productive. In 2018 there was a very successful workshop on atom probe software which centred around discussion and a series of short “flash” software talks showcasing different applications. We’d like to repeat this kind of meeting virtually.
We have some invited speakers lined up to talk about activities from their respective organisations, 5-minute software flash talks (contributions welcome) and time for Q&A plus discussion. The flash talks are an opportunity to briefly demonstrate a script, utility or software plug-in that was developed to facilitate data analysis and/or visualization of atom probe results. You are welcome to send slides ahead of time to present your talk live or to send in a pre-recorded video.
You can sign-up on the Google form: https://forms.gle/A3PyMC6MZ58EvMLL9 which will use to contact you with the meeting joining details (a few days before the meeting) and you can indicate an interest to present a flash talk.
(email atompr...@gmail.com if you can’t use Google forms)
If you are curious about who the Atom Probe Technical Committee are, then please see the note at the bottom of this invitation!
The meeting is not meant to communicate latest scientific results achieved APT/FIM or as place to ask questions about how to use certain software, rather to present what is available and being developed.
Timing, 3 hour duration starting at:
LA 8:00-11:00
New York 11:00-14:00
UTC 15:00-18:00
London 16:00-19:00
Moscow 18:00-21:00
Beijing 23:00-2:00
Sydney 1:00-4:00 (31st July)
More about the Atom Probe Technical Committee:
Following a discussion surrounding computational methods for atom probe microscopy Washington two years ago, a recommendation was made by the APM community to create a technical committee (TC). This motion was supported by members of more than 20 different labs around the world. The committee is currently made up of 8 members from laboratories across the globe, meeting regularly for discussions (see https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/atomprobe-tc for a record); aiming to capture a cross-section of needs of the APM community.
Current committee members: Daniel Haley (committee chair), Anna Ceguerra, Markus Kühbach, Andrew London, Christian Oberdorfer, Bertrand Radiguet, David Reinhard and Dieter Isheim.
The main objectives of the TC are to provide guidance on technical issues relating to atom probe data and atom probe microscopy: