Docker for Science




Supersized Science show

Summary: Scientists might find a friend in the open source software called Docker. It's a platform that bundles up the loose ends of applications - the software and the dependencies that sustain it - into something fairly light that can run on any system. As more scientists share not only their results but their data and code, Docker is helping them reproduce the computational analysis behind the results. What's more, Docker is one of the main tools used in the Agave API platform, a platform-as-a-service solution for hybrid cloud computing developed at TACC and funded in part by the National Science Foundation. Podcast host Jorge Salazar talks with software developer and researcher Joe Stubbs about using Docker for science. Stubbs is a Research Engineering and Scientist Associate in the Web & Cloud Services group at the Texas Advanced Computing Center.