About Project Jupyter

Project Jupyter is an open source project was born out of the IPython Project in 2014 as it evolved to support interactive data science and scientific computing across all programming languages. Jupyter will always be 100% open source software, free for all to use and released under the liberal terms of the modified BSD license

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Community

Our vibrant community empowers us to create an amazing platform. Dynamic developers, cutting edge scientists as well as everyday users work together to further Jupyter's best-in-class tools.

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Steering Council

Our team is primarily led by 15 steering committee members who ultimately make the final decisions.

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Damian Avila

Continuum Analytics
@damianavila on GitHub

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Matthias Bussonnier

UC Berkeley
@carreau on GitHub

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Sylvain Corlay

QuantStack
@sylvaincorlay on GitHub

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Jonathan Frederic

Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
@jdfreder on GitHub

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Brian Granger

Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
@ellisonbg on GitHub

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Jason Grout

Bloomberg
@jasongrout on GitHub

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Jessica Hamrick

UC Berkeley
@jhamrick on GitHub

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Paul Ivanov

Bloomberg
@ivanov on GitHub

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Thomas Kluyver

University of Southampton
@takluyver on GitHub

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Kyle Kelley

Netflix
@rgbkrk on GitHub

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Peter Parente

MaxPoint
@parente on GitHub

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Fernando Perez

UC Berkeley
@fperez on GitHub

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Min Ragan-Kelley

Simula Research Lab
@minrk on GitHub

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Steven Silvester

Continuum Analytics
@blink1073 on GitHub

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Carol Willing

Cal Poly
@willingc on GitHub

sponsors

Sponsors

Project Jupyter receives direct funding from the following sources:

institutional partners

Institutional Partners

Institutional Partners are companies and universities that support the project by employing Steering Council members. Current Institutional Partners include:

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Governance

Robust, community driven development with institutional backing.

NumFocus

Copyright/License

Decisions

Steering Council

Project Jupyter is part of the non-profit NumFOCUS Foundation, which provides fiscal sponsorship, governance and a legal umbrella for the project.