🍟 The State of Open-Source EDA Tools for ASIC Design
Democratising silicon: from RTL to GDSII without a million-dollar licence
Democratising silicon: from RTL to GDSII without a million-dollar licence
From vendor lock-in to freedom: synthesising, routing, and programming FPGAs without proprietary toolchains
pre-commitSome tips and tools to help keep research software reproducible, reliable and robust.
The idea is that this list will grow (and possibly shrink) over time as I discover more engineering blogs, and I will use this list as a reference for myself.
Here are my worked examples from the very useful LinkedIn Learning course: PySpark by Example by Jonathan Fernandes : https://www.linkedin.com/learning/apache-pyspark-by-example
Scala compiles down to Java byte code, which can then be run on any system running the JVM. It would be nice if one could extend this to native system binaries that can be run anywhere. Here I walk through the steps of getting SBT-Native-Packager to create a native binary as well as a docker image that can run my 'Hello World' application.
Calling compiled Scala code inside the JVM from Python using PySpark.
This post walks through the steps involved if you want to fork a public Github repository, privately. It will show how to have an open public repository and how to mirror it in a private repository on Github.