Luis Ibanez

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Chicago, IL

Luis Ibáñez works as Senior Software Engineer at Google Inc in Chicago. Opinions expressed in this site are his own.You can find him in github at:  http://www.github.com/luisibanezand in twitter at: http://www.twitter.com/luisibanezHe previously worked as a Technical Leader at Kitware Inc., and Director of Open Source Community Development at the Open Source EHR Agent (OSEHRA). At Kitware he was closely involved in the development of open source software for medical imaging applications, in particular, working with the Insight Toolkit (ITK).Luis is a strong supporter of Open Access, and one of the editors of the Insight Journal, an OA Journal that enforces the verification of reproducibility. In collaboration with other instructors, Luis taught a course on Open Source Software Practices at RPI between 2007 and 2013, and also at the State University of New York at Albany between 2011 and 2014.Luis Ibáñez received a B.S. in Physics from the Universidad Industrial de Santander (Bucaramanga, Colombia) in 1989 and a M.S. in Optics from the same university in 1994. He received a D.E.A and Ph.D. degrees from the Universite de Rennes I (Rennes, France) in 1995 and 2000, respectively. In 1999, Luis Ibáñez joined the Division of Neurosurgery of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and participated as a member of the MIDAG and CADDLab groups. His work at UNC was related to the development of algorithms for 2 and 3D registration applied to image guided surgery. He also participated as developer of the INSIGHT Registration and Segmentation Toolkit sponsored by the National Library of Medicine. Luis Ibáñez joined Kitware, Inc. in February 2002 where he was one of the main developers of the Insight Toolkit (ITK) coordinating its maintenance with other developers and the user community; he is also one of the main developers of the Image Guided Surgery Toolkit (IGSTK) and participated in crafting the operational principles of the Insight Journal. Luis Ibáñez is a strong supporter of Open Access, and the verification of reproducibility in scientific publications and is a regular speaker in ITK training courses, and in events disseminating the principles of Open Source. In August 2014, Luis joined Google Inc as Software Engineer, to work with the corporate engineering team in New York city.

Authored Content

New open hardware: Raspberry Pi B+

I got a new Raspberry Pi B+ board from Adafruit. Check out my review of it here. The main differences between the B+ and the Raspberry Pi model B are the new model has: More…

Jazz is the music of open source

There is a small place in New York city, appropriately called Smalls Jazz Club, where musicians of all ages gather every evening to play the music they love. During these…

10 ways The Nature of Code is open

I recently came across a fascinating book, The Nature of Code by Daniel Shiffman. It is an introduction to using software tools to better understand the way things interact in…

Authored Comments

Mark,

Thanks for the great article.

This is a very interesting perspective of the symbiotic evolution of open source and DevOps.

I fully agree with your point about the importance of growing an internal culture of information sharing, and commitment to quality improvement.

Emily,

Thanks for the great article.

You make very good points. The following two particularly resonate with my experience:

1) For students: The exposure and training that students get when participating in an open source community are excellent preparation for becoming professional DevOps, and it is done in a much lower pressure environment.

2) For projects: The energy, freshness and diversity that students bring to an open source project are essential to keep the liveliness and momentum of a project. They are also the very important source of "next generation" developers and maintainers who can assure the long-term sustainability of the project's community.

Thanks for raising awareness about these opportunities.