All Projects → kubernetes → Community

kubernetes / Community

Licence: apache-2.0
Kubernetes community content

Programming Languages

Jupyter Notebook
11667 projects
python
139335 projects - #7 most used programming language
go
31211 projects - #10 most used programming language
shell
77523 projects

Projects that are alternatives of or similar to Community

Wsdm Adhoc Document Retrieval
This is our solution for WSDM - DiggSci 2020. We implemented a simple yet robust search pipeline which ranked 2nd in the validation set and 4th in the test set. We won the gold prize at innovation track and bronze prize at dataset track.
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Meetup
밋업 자료
Stars: ✭ 49 (-99.46%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Fashion Tag
Baseline of FashionAI Competition based on Keras.
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Probandstats Pydatanyc2019
Introduction to Probability and Statistics
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Unimelb Data Science
All my Lecture Notes, Assignments and Past Exam material.
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Avgn
A generative network for animal vocalizations. For dimensionality reduction, sequencing, clustering, corpus-building, and generating novel 'stimulus spaces'. All with notebook examples using freely available datasets.
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
My Projects
It's my projects
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Livelossplot
Live training loss plot in Jupyter Notebook for Keras, PyTorch and others
Stars: ✭ 1,050 (-88.5%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Ncar Python Tutorial
Numerical & Scientific Computing with Python Tutorial
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
O Que 15 Mil Tweets Revelam Sobre Seu Candidato
Código e dados para a matéria "O que 15 mil tweets revelam sobre seu candidato" || Code and data for the story "What 15k tweets show about your candidate"
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Presentations
Talks & Workshops by the CODAIT team
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Octave
Musical data transmission
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Machine learning economics
Machine Learning for Economics
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Vapoursynthcolab
AI Video Processing/Upscaling With VapourSynth in Google Colab
Stars: ✭ 47 (-99.49%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Matminer examples
A repo of examples for the matminer (https://github.com/hackingmaterials/matminer) code
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Live Video Analytics
A collection of reference applications using live video analytics capabilities in Azure Media Services
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
K Anonymity
Anonymization methods for network security.
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Numerical Linear Algebra
Free online textbook of Jupyter notebooks for fast.ai Computational Linear Algebra course
Stars: ✭ 8,263 (-9.53%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Anomaly detection
This is a times series anomaly detection algorithm, implemented in Python, for catching multiple anomalies. It uses a moving average with an extreme student deviate (ESD) test to detect anomalous points.
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook
Estid Sig
Verify Estonian e-id signatures on Ethereum
Stars: ✭ 50 (-99.45%)
Mutual labels:  jupyter-notebook

Kubernetes Community

Welcome to the Kubernetes community!

This is the starting point for joining and contributing to the Kubernetes community - improving docs, improving code, giving talks etc.

To learn more about the project structure and organization, please refer to Project Governance information.

Communicating

The communication page lists communication channels like chat, issues, mailing lists, conferences, etc.

For more specific topics, try a SIG.

Governance

Kubernetes has the following types of groups that are officially supported:

  • Committees are named sets of people that are chartered to take on sensitive topics. This group is encouraged to be as open as possible while achieving its mission but, because of the nature of the topics discussed, private communications are allowed. Examples of committees include the steering committee and things like security or code of conduct.
  • Special Interest Groups (SIGs) are persistent open groups that focus on a part of the project. SIGs must have open and transparent proceedings. Anyone is welcome to participate and contribute provided they follow the Kubernetes Code of Conduct. The purpose of a SIG is to own and develop a set of subprojects.
    • Subprojects Each SIG can have a set of subprojects. These are smaller groups that can work independently. Some subprojects will be part of the main Kubernetes deliverables while others will be more speculative and live in the kubernetes-sigs github org.
  • Working Groups are temporary groups that are formed to address issues that cross SIG boundaries. Working groups do not own any code or other long term artifacts. Working groups can report back and act through involved SIGs.
  • User Groups are groups for facilitating communication and discovery of information related to topics that have long term relevance to large groups of Kubernetes users. They do not have ownership of parts of the Kubernetes code base.

See the full governance doc for more details on these groups.

A SIG can have its own policy for contribution, described in a README or CONTRIBUTING file in the SIG folder in this repo (e.g. sig-cli/CONTRIBUTING.md), and its own mailing list, slack channel, etc.

If you want to edit details about a SIG (e.g. its weekly meeting time or its leads), please follow these instructions that detail how our docs are auto-generated.

Learn to Build

Links in contributors/devel/README.md lead to many relevant technical topics.

Contribute

A first step to contributing is to pick from the list of kubernetes SIGs. Start attending SIG meetings, join the slack channel and subscribe to the mailing list. SIGs will often have a set of "help wanted" issues that can help new contributors get involved.

The Contributor Guide provides detailed instruction on how to get your ideas and bug fixes seen and accepted, including:

  1. How to file an issue
  2. How to find something to work on
  3. How to open a pull request

Membership

We encourage all contributors to become members. We aim to grow an active, healthy community of contributors, reviewers, and code owners. Learn more about requirements and responsibilities of membership in our Community Membership page.

Note that the project description data, including the texts, logos, images, and/or trademarks, for each open source project belongs to its rightful owner. If you wish to add or remove any projects, please contact us at [email protected].