How to Use the GUI, CyberDuck, GoCommands to move alot of data quickly and easily
When
About the webinar
Got your hypothesis? Check. Collected data? Check. Got research cyberinfrastructure to store and analyze your data and share it with your collaborators? With CyVerse--absolutely!
So now what? In our Get Started series, Research Data Scientists Michele Cosi and Jeff Gillan help you get started on your open science journey using your CyVerse account and the plentiful computational resources that come with it, covering key tasks like data transfers, finding apps, and launching and running apps. In this webinar, they cover the basics with a short focus on how to use the command-line tools called GoCommands to move data faster and more efficiently than using the Graphic User Interface (GUI).
This is part of our "Get Started" series that repeats in part during the semester, but subsequent webinars will emphasize different features, as listed below:
November 1: Get Started on Sharing Data, Permissions, & Teams
November 15: Get Started on Basic Troubleshooting for Analysis Errors
What you'll learn
- Where to get your free account and what important info you can find on the CyVerse dashboard
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How to move data using the Discovery Environment GUI, CyberDuck & GoCommands
About the presenters
Michele Cosi is a Research Data Scientist at the UArizona's Data Science Institute. His experience and expertise in teaching and training researchers and students in data science tools and practices include serving as an instructor of CyVerse Foundational Open Science Skills (cyverse.org/foss), at CompBio Asia, and UA Data Lab workshops. His research interests are in genomics and phenomics, with a focus on workflow development, automation and data extraction.
Jeff Gillan is also a Research Data Scientist for the UArizona's Data Science Institute, where he offers workshops on geospatial data analysis and drone data management, as well as teaching the FOSS workshops. Jeff's expertise is in developing aerial photography and machine learning processing pipelines on high computation cloud resources such Jetstream2. He arrived at CyVerse in 2022 where his role was to expand the knowledge-base and accessibility of drone imagery tools while promoting the principles of open science.