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
>
>
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
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
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;
> •
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);
•