Documentation
Bogumił Kamiński & Milan Bouchet-Valat, for their custodianship of DataFrames.jl and the data ecosystem
Fons van der Plas, for his work on Pluto.jl
Dilum Aluthge, for his contributions to our community infrastructure and community building
This year’s keynotes were stellar, as always, and among the most viewed presentations of the conference.
William Kahan, Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, and of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science presented PyTorch and My Journey in Open Source
We were excited to have the JuMP-dev conference co-located within JuliaCon for the first time this year. It was an awesome opportunity to get the users and developers from the JuMP-dev community engaged with the greater Julia community. You can check out the JuMP videos from conference in State of Julia, including recent and future improvements.
These include speed increases for CSV.jl and DataFrames.jl, packages reaching 1.0, threading roadmap, faster method insertion, small type info improvements, inference improvements, subtyping and intersection fixes and speedups, CI stability, latency, system images, array optimizations, GC performance, compiler extensibility, new compiler directions, AbstractInterpreter, OpaqueClosure, compiler plugins, Automatic Differentiation, BLAS, sparse matrices and linear algebra.
The third annual Thank you to everyone who purchased the JuliaCon 2021 T-shirt or mug this year. We had a set of incredible designs which folks seemed to really like given we sold more than 700 shirts this year, raising almost 4,000 USD! If you missed the initial batch, it is not too late, check out our Invenia at JuliaCon general JuliaCon 2021 feedback form live. Please feel free to send over any feedback on the conference as we are always interested in improving the experience. Again, a huge thank you to the conference speakers, attendees, and volunteers for making this year such a huge success! We look forward to seeing you all again soon.JuliaCon T-Shirt and Mug