I think there's definitely room for configuring the filebrowser to show
ISO-formated dates. We also need to deal with sorting based on date, and
many other things.
On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 10:11 PM Lawrence D’Oliveiro
wrote:
> On Saturday, February 24, 2018 at 5:55:20 PM
On Saturday, February 24, 2018 at 5:55:20 PM UTC+13, ellisonbg wrote:
>
> Not sure how I feel about showing users ISO 8601 formatted datetimes
> though.
>
It is not a particularly human friendly datetime format.
>
It’s standard in Japan. And it *is* an international standard, after all.
I've deployed a Jupyterhub service on an EC2 instance (running as a system
service) that uses dockerspawner.SystemUserSpawner to launch a
jupyter/docker-stacks minimal-notebook environment for a user. I've
installed and activated nb_conda, and nb_conda_kernels, (trying both) on
both the root
Pete,
Thanks for sharing! I have never used Confluence, but this look like
it would be useful.
Cheers,
Brian
On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 8:34 AM, Peter Parente wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I wanted to make you aware of a utility we recently open sourced called
> nbconflux, a tool for
Hi all,
I wanted to make you aware of a utility we recently open sourced called
nbconflux, a tool for publishing Jupyter Notebooks as Atlassian Confluence
pages based on nbconvert.
https://github.com/Valassis-Digital-Media/nbconflux
nbconflux is useful when:
* You use Jupyter notebooks to
I am trying to use R through a Jupyter Notebook to connect to Hbase. The
package I am using is SparklyR. However, I am having trouble connecting to
Hbase. I am not sure if SparklyR can be used outside of RStudio. If this
is possible can someone help me with the environment configuration?
> On Feb 26, 2018, at 6:26 AM, Thomas Kluyver wrote:
>
> To clarify, Jupyter Notebook (the individual server) *does* support Windows.
> JupyterHub, which provides multi-user authenticated notebook servers, does
> not.
To further clarify Thomas' response, JupyterHub, a hub
To clarify, Jupyter Notebook (the individual server) *does* support
Windows. JupyterHub, which provides multi-user authenticated notebook
servers, does not.
On 23 February 2018 at 14:14, David Doherty wrote:
> Got any more details? It won't display folders starting with