> Sounds really interesting - the one reservation I'd have, however, is that
> HDF5 doesn't appear to be open-source.
just to note that HDF5 is open source. License available here:
ftp://ftp.hdfgroup.org/HDF5/current/src/unpacked/COPYING
Andre.
>
> Cheers,
> James
>
> Jon Olav Vik wrote:
>>
>>
My apologies; there was an unfortunate mistake in the URL of the last email.
The minutes from last week's ABI CellML Team meeting are up at:
http://www.cellml.org/meeting_minutes/abi-meeting-minutes-2008-11-05
Dougal
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The minutes from last week's ABI CellML Team meeting are up at:
http://www.cellml.org/meeting_minutes/abi-meeting-minutes-2008-10-05
Dougal
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My apologies - I should have looked a bit harder!
Randy Heiland wrote:
The claim below surprised me (since I used to know and work with many
of the HDF group), so I had a look at the license for HDF5:
All rights reserved.
Contributors: National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)
a
The claim below surprised me (since I used to know and work with many
of the HDF group), so I had a look at the license for HDF5:
All rights reserved.
Contributors: National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA)
at the University of Illinois, Fortner Software, Unidata Program
Cente
Hi Jon Olav,
Sounds really interesting - the one reservation I'd have, however, is
that HDF5 doesn't appear to be open-source.
Cheers,
James
Jon Olav Vik wrote:
Dear all,
I'm considering HDF5 for my storage needs in simulating a CellML model under
multiple parameter scenarios. HDF5 is desi
Dear all,
I'm considering HDF5 for my storage needs in simulating a CellML model under
multiple parameter scenarios. HDF5 is designed for efficient storage,
retrieval, navigation and subsetting of huge data sets [1], with annotation
[2]. I plan on storing both raw and post-processed data, so th