Rogue Scholar Posts

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Authors Noam Ross, Jeroen Ooms

Nos complace anunciar que R-Universeha sido designado como un nuevo Proyecto de alto nivel del R Consortium ¡Nos alegramosde estar en compañía de proyectos comunitarios y de infraestructuras que han sidodesignados críticos para el Ecosistema R!, como R-hub, DBI, R-Ladies y elPrograma Grupos de Usuari(a|o)s de R y agradecemos el apoyo de R Consortium y desu Comité Directivo de Infraestructura (ISC) El R Consortium apoya a la comunidad R para

Exciting News! The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative has awarded rOpenSci a new grant to foster sustainable scientific software as a pillar of Open Science in Latin America by building capacity and community. With this $340K grant, we’re planning to launch a Spanish-language version of our Champions Program, along with other new initiatives to make sustainable software development more accessible to researchers across the region.

Published in rOpenSci - open tools for open science
Authors Stefanie Butland, Karthik Ram, Noam Ross, Maëlle Salmon

We are thrilled to have been awarded new funding as part of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Open Science program’s education and capacity building strategy. This $400K grant will support a new project to enable more members of historically excluded groups to participate in, benefit from, and become leaders in the R, research software engineering, and open source and open science communities.

Published in rOpenSci - open tools for open science

Want to get some hands-on insights into running an open source community? Here’s an opportunity to work with me, rOpenSci’s Community Manager, on some non-code community-related work. I am looking for someone to work 1 day a week for 12 to 14 weeks. Working alongside rOpenSci’s Community Manager, Stefanie Butland, you will use guidelines and checklists to help run some of our established programs like our Blog and Community Calls.

Published in rOpenSci - open tools for open science
Author Karthik Ram

Today we are pleased to announce that we have received new funding from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. The $894k grant will help us improve infrastructure for R packages and enable us to move towards a science first package ecosystem for the R community. You may have already noticed some developments on this front when we announced our automated documentation server back in June.