Re: Shutting down the Atlas port

2020-11-05 Thread Ryan Schmidt
On Nov 5, 2020, at 18:43, Fred Wright wrote: > On Thu, 5 Nov 2020, Ryan Schmidt wrote: > >> DSDP >> R >> esmf >> gr-specest >> itpp >> levmar >> lua-numlua >> nco >> psfex >> py-numpy >> py-scipy >> scamp >> shogun >> shogun-devel >> source-extractor >> stimfit >> sundials >> sundials2 > >

Re: Shutting down the Atlas port

2020-11-05 Thread Fred Wright
On Thu, 5 Nov 2020, Ryan Schmidt wrote: On Nov 3, 2020, at 04:52, Vincent Habchi wrote: Atlas, the software meant to provide scientific computing tools with a high-performance assembly-based library has, IMHO, reached its end of life. My case is this: • Last developer (unstable) release is

Re: Shutting down the Atlas port

2020-11-05 Thread Marius Schamschula
Ryan, I don’t know about the others, but I have the following installed w/o atlas R py-numpy py-scipy sundails2 > On Nov 5, 2020, at 4:35 PM, Ryan Schmidt wrote: > > On Nov 3, 2020, at 04:52, Vincent Habchi wrote: > >> Atlas, the software meant to provide scientific computing tools with a

Re: Shutting down the Atlas port

2020-11-05 Thread Ryan Schmidt
On Nov 3, 2020, at 04:52, Vincent Habchi wrote: > Atlas, the software meant to provide scientific computing tools with a > high-performance assembly-based library has, IMHO, reached its end of life. > > My case is this: > > • Last developer (unstable) release is more than two years old; > •

Shutting down the Atlas port

2020-11-03 Thread Vincent Habchi
Guys, Atlas, the software meant to provide scientific computing tools with a high-performance assembly-based library has, IMHO, reached its end of life. My case is this: • Last developer (unstable) release is more than two years old; • Last stable release is twice older (2016); •