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GeoServer
Open source server for sharing geospatial data
Access
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MapServer
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Open source platform for publishing spatial data
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Coming Soon!
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Open source platform for publishing spatial data
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Access
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MariaDB
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Open source relational database
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Coming Soon!
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Open source relational database
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Access
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Open Data Kit
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Open source platform to collect data quickly, accurately, offline, and at scale
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Access
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If you are new to JupyterLab (or Jupyter notebooks in general), a good starting point is its official documentation, which includes a detailed user guide. There is also a nice and short (~ 6 min.) introduction video available.
For specific components integrated to the platform (e.g. Code Server), please refer to their own documentation.
Which languages are supported by the platform?
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The platform has kernels for Python (3.6), R (4.0), Go (1.15), Julia (1.5), Java (11), Scala (2.12), PHP (7.4), Ruby (2.7), Octave (6.1), dot (2.43), gnuplot (5.2) which you can use in interactive notebooks. All these languages are also accessible through the terminal interface. By using the terminal you can also use C (GNU 9.3), C++ (GNU 9.3), Fortran (GNU 9.3), Perl (5.30), and CUDA (10.2).
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The platform has kernels for Python (3.8.5), R (4.1.0), Go (1.16.3), Julia (1.5.4), Java (11.0.11), Scala (2.12.12), PHP (7.4.3), Ruby (2.7.0), Octave (6.2.0), dot (2.43.0), gnuplot (5.2) which you can use in interactive notebooks. All these languages are also accessible through the terminal interface. By using the terminal you can also use C (GNU 9.3), C++ (GNU 9.3), Fortran (GNU 9.3), Perl (5.30), and CUDA (10.2).
Which libraries and packages are supported by the platform?
Complete list of system packages (including low-level libraries, e.g. OpenBLAS, ATLAS, PROJ, GDAL, etc.) and language-specific packages (e.g. Python and R packages) are listed under public/platform
folder on the platform.
Why the latest version of xxx is not available?