
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Dr. Katy Huff (@katyhuff) spoke with us about nuclear engineering, effective software development, and the apropos command.
Katy wrote an O'Reilly book describing Python software development to scientists: Effective Computation in Physics: Field Guide to Research with Python. She has been involved with Software Carpentry.
Katy is a professor at University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Department of Nuclear, Plasma, and Radiological Engineering. She uses Bell and Glasstone's Nuclear Reactor Theory in her Nuclear Reactor Theory class.
Katy's personal site
Stellerator
Godiva Device
Janelle Shane creates the AI Weirdness blog. (She was also a guest in #275: Don't Do What the Computer Tells You.)
By Logical Elegance4.8
188188 ratings
Dr. Katy Huff (@katyhuff) spoke with us about nuclear engineering, effective software development, and the apropos command.
Katy wrote an O'Reilly book describing Python software development to scientists: Effective Computation in Physics: Field Guide to Research with Python. She has been involved with Software Carpentry.
Katy is a professor at University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Department of Nuclear, Plasma, and Radiological Engineering. She uses Bell and Glasstone's Nuclear Reactor Theory in her Nuclear Reactor Theory class.
Katy's personal site
Stellerator
Godiva Device
Janelle Shane creates the AI Weirdness blog. (She was also a guest in #275: Don't Do What the Computer Tells You.)

273 Listeners

382 Listeners

288 Listeners

626 Listeners

275 Listeners

583 Listeners

229 Listeners

69 Listeners

985 Listeners

40 Listeners

8,077 Listeners

189 Listeners

63 Listeners

140 Listeners

67 Listeners