Hi,
It's great to have such a server. I'll forward the address to a
collaborator of mine. Feedback on how it scales is very welcome,
especially since we might set up such a server in Orsay as well.
The first day with around 15-25 users at the same time doing light
things was no problem for
Hi Christian,
On 7/20/11 3:06 PM, Christian Stump wrote:
we now have a public sage notebook with the combinat queue applied
running on sage.lacim.uqam.ca. Everything seems to run smoothly, but
we are still in the TEST PHASE, so please NO SERIOUS RESEARCH so far,
accounts and
we now have a public sage notebook with the combinat queue applied
running on sage.lacim.uqam.ca. Everything seems to run smoothly, but
we are still in the TEST PHASE, so please NO SERIOUS RESEARCH so far,
accounts and worksheets MIGHT GET DELETED.
no one really answered here; does that mean
Hi Christian,
I did try it out and it worked for me (though I did not run heavy
calculations since you said not to use it for resarch ;-) ).
I think it is a very good idea to have such a notebook server!
Anne
On 7/20/11 3:06 PM, Christian Stump wrote:
we now have a public sage notebook with
Hi,
I'm just curious. What are the *drawbacks* of installing the combinat
queue? What if I installed it into http://sagenb.org, just viewing it
as another optional package (I install dozens of optional packages).
-- William
On Fri, Jul 15, 2011 at 12:22 PM, Christian Stump
Hi William,
Thanks for your reply!
I'm just curious. What are the *drawbacks* of installing the combinat
queue?
Others might have better answers, here are some thoughts:
- the combinat queue is *not* stable
- some/most the code is not properly tested and/or even still in development
- the
When I gave a week-long lecture series using Sage I built a binary
distribution on one of the machines in the computer room. Just build Sage
with all patches of your liking and then sage -bdist. Then I wrote a small
shell for the students to use that would download and unpack the binary