Jupyter recognized as “Champion of Open Science” by U.S. White House

Jason Grout
Jupyter Blog
Published in
2 min readMay 7, 2024

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Jupyter is recognized as a “Champion of Open Science” by the United States White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, in celebration of 2023 being the Year of Open Science. For more information, see the White House press release.

This recognition honors the large group of contributors, users, and organizations that have made Jupyter what it is today. More specifically, we, the Project Jupyter Executive Council, lists and thanks here the current (as of December 2023) and previous members of the following Jupyter leadership groups: Executive Council, Software Steering Council, Software Subproject Councils, Working Groups, Standing Committees, Distinguished Contributors, and the former Jupyter Steering Council. (If there is someone in these groups that we accidentally missed in the list below, please let us know.)

Project leaders and distinguished contributors (alphabetical by last name)

  • Safia Abdalla
  • Damián Avila
  • Lorena A. Barba
  • Kevin Bates
  • Mehmet Bektas
  • Douglas Blank
  • Nicholas Bollweg
  • Alex Bozarth
  • Maarten Breddels
  • Nicolas Brichet
  • David Brochart
  • Matthias Bussonnier
  • Eric Charles
  • S. Chris Colbert
  • Frédéric Collonval
  • Sylvain Corlay
  • Martha Cryan
  • Carlos Córdoba
  • Itay Dafna
  • Afshin Darian
  • Jacob Diamond-Reivich
  • Georgiana Dolocan
  • R Ely
  • Tony Fast
  • Vidar T. Fauske
  • Sharan Foga
  • Jessica Zosa Forde
  • Gabriel Fouasnon
  • Jonathan Frederic
  • Eric Gentry
  • Tim George
  • Sarah Gibson
  • Kevin Goldsmith
  • Rahul Goyal
  • Brian Granger
  • Jason Grout
  • Jessica Hamrick
  • Tim Head
  • Lindsey Heagy
  • Carlos Herrero
  • Chris Holdgraf
  • Andrii Ieroshenko
  • Paul Ivanov
  • Piyush Jain
  • Lucy Jimenez
  • Kyle Kelley
  • Max C Klein
  • Thomas Kluyver
  • Michał Krassowski
  • Simon Li
  • Ryan Lovett
  • Joe Lucas
  • Johan Mabille
  • Grant Nestor
  • Cameron Oelsen
  • M Pacer
  • Yuvi Panda
  • Peter Parente
  • Fernando Pérez
  • Isabela Presedo-Floyd
  • David Qiu
  • Min Ragan-Kelley
  • Luciano Resende
  • Rosio Reyes
  • Ian Rose
  • Ana Ruvalcaba
  • Zach Sailer
  • Ayaz Salikhov
  • Matthew Seal
  • Saul Shanabrook
  • Steve Silvester
  • William Stein
  • Erik Sundell
  • Nicolas Thiéry
  • Rollin Thomas
  • Jeremy Tuloup
  • Rick Wagner
  • Mariko Wakabayashi
  • Jason Weill
  • Carol Willing
  • Jessica Xu

Additionally, we’d like to thank the following organizations that were directly involved in the work (other than funding agencies) in terms of staff or other significant resources to directly support the development of Project Jupyter.

Organizations (alphabetical)

  • Amazon Web Services
  • Anaconda
  • Bloomberg
  • California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
  • Databricks
  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • MongoDB
  • QuanSight
  • QuantStack
  • Simula Research Lab
  • Two Sigma
  • University of California, Berkeley

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