Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
84 lines (73 loc) · 4 KB

2021-04-01-daniel-nuest.md

File metadata and controls

84 lines (73 loc) · 4 KB
layout title author rse excerpt date external_media length duration explicit rse_stories resources
post
Are You Interested in Riddles?
@vsoch
Daniel Nüst
Daniel Nüst is a research software engineer with interest and expertise ranging from reproducibility to geoinformatics. His journey has taken him from industry, to graduate training, to asking fundamental questions about how we do research, and how the process could be changed for the better.
2021-04-01 01:30:00 -0700
21954670
00:36:34
no
true
name url
Daniel's research project: Opening Reproducible Research
name url
Guide for Reproducible Research by The Turing Way
name url
o2r's Reproducible Research Support Service
name url
Oxford code review network
name url
Ten Simple Rules for Writing Dockerfiles for Reproducible Data Science
name url
Five selfish reasons to work reproducibly
name url
Publishing computational workflows using a Research Compendium
name url
CODECHECK
name url
@450Movement on Twitter
name url
🥏 Ultimate Frisbee
name url
The Greatest Sport Ever Invented by Man

Daniel Nüst is a research software engineer working on the project "Opening Reproducible Research" at the Institute for Geoinformatics, University of Münster. In this episode, we talk about RSE career paths, reproducible research, and computational workflows under peer review.


After finding his dream discipline of geoinformatics as a student, Daniel Nüst continued learning more about the Earth by supporting researchers with latest computer science methods as a developer and consultant at 52°North, a non-profit company for applied research with Open Source software. An RSE by tasks but not title already then, he joined the German RSE community while pursuing a PhD back at the Institute for Geoinformatics at the university of Münster. Now he is vice-chair of the German RSE association and conducts research in the areas of Open Science and computational reproducibility.

You can follow Daniel on Twitter and GitHub.

Shownotes

If you want to learn more about the 52°North Initiative for Geospatial Open Source Software GmbH, a non-profit private research organisation and network for innovation, check out https://52north.org/about-us/profile/.

For the service, Daniel created short and long reading lists around reproducibility, sorted by time available to spend. See here for details.

On research software vs. career paths and recognition of RSE work, you should check out de-RSE's first position paper An environment for sustainable research software in Germany and beyond: current state, open challenges, and call for action.

For CODECHECK, check out how to Get involved as codechecker, author, reviewer, editor or stakeholder from a journal, publisher of conference.