Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines |
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Following the convention of the Make-demo plot (where green files are
input and blue files are built), the first graph's gray boxes were
also changed to blue.
Some other minor corrections were made.
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With this copyright, a random viewer will know their rights regarding
these files (that they are free software and that they can modify them
and redistribute them).
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The fact that we only displayed the Git checksum before showing it in
the paper could be a little confusing to people not much familiar with
Git. So a commit checksum (taken randomly from the history of these
slides) was added to it.
Also, some minor changes were done here and there.
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For EWASS, they recommended a 16:9 aspect ratio. This is becoming the
standard and after some tests, I saw felt that it does indeed show
better on modern monitors while also giving more horizontal space. The
slides are now changed to this aspect ratio and everything was
slightly modified to show nicely in it.
Also, an extra step was added to the Git demonstration steps to show
how progress on the project branch happens independently of progress
on the template.
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After the previous experience of presenting the slides in Ghent, they
are reordered to be more clear and cause less confusion. In
particular, until this commit, I was describing the software build
steps in the end, so the audience mainly forgot about the analysis
steps and thought this template is just something like Docker or a
virtual machine.
With this commit, the steps are described in the same step that occur:
first how the software are built, then how the input data are
downloaded and finally how the software are run on the data and the
values are written into the paper.
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A graph was added showing how Git branching and history are used to
verfiy the integrity of the result.
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