Overleaf at CERN: Supporting thousands of research collaborations
Wednesday, 3 July 2019 -
09:30
Monday, 1 July 2019
Tuesday, 2 July 2019
Wednesday, 3 July 2019
09:30
Collaborative Scientific Authoring at CERN: A user-centered approach
-
Nikos Kasioumis
(
CERN
)
Collaborative Scientific Authoring at CERN: A user-centered approach
Nikos Kasioumis
(
CERN
)
09:30 - 09:45
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
For over a year through 2016 to 2017 a CERN-wide trial of collaborative authoring platforms took place, aiming at understanding the authoring habits of the CERN community and gathering user requirements. As a result, the Overleaf cloud platform is now fully available to the CERN Community.
09:45
Overleaf: The founder's perspective on reaching four million users worldwide, and what lies ahead
-
John Hammersley
(
Overleaf
)
Harriet Walsh
(
Overleaf
)
Overleaf: The founder's perspective on reaching four million users worldwide, and what lies ahead
John Hammersley
(
Overleaf
)
Harriet Walsh
(
Overleaf
)
09:45 - 10:15
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
Overleaf is a collaborative, cloud-based writing platform with over 3.9 million users worldwide as of early 2019. It's helping to make the process of writing, editing and publishing scientific documents quicker and easier for students, teachers and researchers alike. Overleaf was founded by two mathematicians in 2012. They had been working on a project involving many partners to build autonomous cars, and work between team members had been challenging. So they built a light-weight, LaTeX-based collaboration system and used it for writing their research papers. It was simple to use - all you needed was a web browser. Overleaf has since seen rapid adoption across science and research, and its market-leading collaboration technology is now in use in universities, labs and industry worldwide. These include major institutions such as Stanford and Caltech, with Overleaf becoming an important part not only of research collaborations but also of undergraduate teaching. Most recently, Overleaf acquired its nearest competitor ShareLaTeX, and their combined team has worked together to build an even stronger next-generation platform to take collaborative writing to the next level.
10:15
Coffee break
Coffee break
10:15 - 10:30
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
10:30
Overleaf use case at CERN: CLIC
-
Markus Aicheler
(
Helsinki Institute of Physics (FI)
)
Overleaf use case at CERN: CLIC
Markus Aicheler
(
Helsinki Institute of Physics (FI)
)
10:30 - 10:40
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
10:40
Evolution of LaTeX towards Overleaf in the CERN accelerator sector
-
John Jowett
(
CERN
)
Evolution of LaTeX towards Overleaf in the CERN accelerator sector
John Jowett
(
CERN
)
10:40 - 10:50
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
10:50
Collaborative writing with Overleaf at TE-MPE-PE
-
Michal Maciejewski
(
CERN
)
Collaborative writing with Overleaf at TE-MPE-PE
Michal Maciejewski
(
CERN
)
10:50 - 11:00
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
11:00
Overleaf use case at CERN: ALICE
-
David Dobrigkeit Chinellato
(
University of Campinas UNICAMP (BR)
)
Overleaf use case at CERN: ALICE
David Dobrigkeit Chinellato
(
University of Campinas UNICAMP (BR)
)
11:00 - 11:10
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
11:10
Overleaf use case at CERN: LHCb
-
Alex Pearce
(
CERN
)
Overleaf use case at CERN: LHCb
Alex Pearce
(
CERN
)
11:10 - 11:20
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
11:20
Overleaf use case at CERN: BioLEIR Yellow Report
-
Silvia Schuh-Erhard
(
CERN
)
Overleaf use case at CERN: BioLEIR Yellow Report
Silvia Schuh-Erhard
(
CERN
)
11:20 - 11:30
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre
11:30
Q&A
Q&A
11:30 - 12:15
Room: 31/3-004 - IT Amphitheatre