== Mailing List ==There is a separate Code4Lib-SE (Southeast) mailing list for Please add Keynote speaker nomination using the planning of Southeast region Code4Lib meetupstemplate below. Feel free to post Code4Lib-SE topics to the main Code4Lib mailing list See [https://wiki.code4lib.org/2025_Keynote_Speakers_Nominations 2025 Keynote Speakers Nominations] as well (for instance, announcing new meetups) but this Code4Lib-SE specific mailing list will make sure we don't drown the main mailing list with other sorts of Code4Lib-SE administrivaexample.
https://groupsKeynote speaker nominations for the Code4Lib 2026 Conference will be accepted through October 24, 2025.google.com/forum/#!forum/code4lib-se
== Upcoming Events ==If you would like to nominate anonymously/without Code4Lib wiki account, you can send email to [mailto:msl321@lehigh.edu Maccabee Levine] and he will add the nominee to this page.
Code4Lib Southeast 2026 is in the works! Watch this space for more information. For any questions, feel free to email Andrew Battelini (abattel@emory.edu).
== Past Events ==__TOC__
==Kate Deibel=Summer 2025: Code4Lib Southeast and DevOps4Lib Southeast conferences @ Emory University, Atlanta Georgia.=== Code4lib SE and Devops4Lib Se was hosted by the Emory University Robert W Woodruff Library in Atlanta, Georgia on July 22-23, 2025.For more details, visit the [[Southeast Summer 2025|Code4Lib Southeast Summer 2025 Page]]
Katherine "Kate" Deibel has had a varied career in academia working within and across many disciplines, including computer science, education, disability, comics, digital literacies, and libraries. After transitioning in her first year of graduate school, she earned her PhD in computer science and engineering at the University of Washington in 2011 with a multidisciplinary study of the social and technological factors that hinder adoption of reading technologies among adults with dyslexia. As an ardent advocate for usable and accessible technologies, she works and educates to ensure that library technologies are effective tools for both library patrons and staff. Having worked in library technologies at the University of Washington and Syracuse University Libraries, she now is the systems librarian at Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, spearheading their adoption of open library systems such as FOLIO and VuFind.
=== May 2019[https: Code4Lib Southeast @ North Carolina State University //www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/xs3p6vfnjkx5h9gw2f4sz/deibel-cv.pdf?rlkey=5428wdpyauvmpvmtelqlqy89r&e=1&dl= Code4Lib Southeast 2019 was hosted at the James B. Hunt Jr. Library at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, NC on Friday, May 31st, 2019.0 CV]
For more details, visit the Email contact information [[Southeast 2019|Code4Lib Southeast 2019 page]mailto:katherine.deibel@gmail.com]
==Annalee Newitz= Summer 2018: Code4Lib Southeast, July 27, 2018 ===Code4Lib [[Southeast 2018]] was hosted by the Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library in Atlanta, Georgia on July 27, 2018.
Session slidesAnnalee Newitz is a science journalist who also writes science fiction. They are the author of several books, videosincluding Automatic Noodle, an instant USA Today bestseller, The Terraformers, which was nominated for the Nebula Award, and Four Lost Cities: A Secret History of the Urban Age. They have a monthly column in New Scientist magazine, tweets and more are available on the '''[[Southeast 2018 Schedule]]''' pageco-host of the Hugo-winning podcast Our Opinions Are Correct.(from Website)
=== Spring 2017: Code4Lib Southeast at Emory University LibraryNewitz was awarded a Knight Science Journalism Fellowship for 2002 to 2003, April 21supporting them as a research fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From 2004 to 2005 Newitz was a policy analyst for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, 2017 ===and from 2007 to 2009 was on the board of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility. (from Wikipedia)
Information about the event can be found at this link: '''[[Southeast_2017|Code4LibSE 2017 Emory Meetinghttps://www.techsploitation.com/ Website][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annalee_Newitz Wikipedia]'''
We currently have documentation from the Spring 2017 event about how the conference was planned. This document is available to anyone and is available Email contact information [httpsmailto://wikiannalee@gmail.code4lib.org/images/1/19/HowToThrowA1DayConference.pdf herecom].
* (Summer - Fall 2015 will be in Greenville, SC) - Cancelled==Xe Iaso==* Winter-Spring 2015 will be at TulaneXe Iaso is "a technical educator, New Orleansconference speaker, Louisiana (primary contacttwitch streamer, vtuber, and philosopher that focuses on ways to help make technology easier to understand and do cursed things in the process." They are best-known in the code4lib community for their work on [https: Phil Suda//github.com/TecharoHQ/anubis Anubis], which "weighs the soul of incoming HTTP requests to stop AI crawlers" and is widely used by code4libbers defending cultural heritage web sites from bot onslaught. They are [https: phil//xeiaso.suda@gmailnet/talks/ an experienced and engaging conference speaker]. They have gotten pretty engaged with the code4lib community as they support our use of Anubis, and I think it would be neat if we all got to meet each other.com) - Cancelled
=== Spring 2015https: Code4LibSE Datathon ===//xeiaso.net/
'''May 1, 1-5 PM'''<br />'''Room 128, Hodges Library, University of Tennessee Knoxville'''<br />'''Registration page[mailto: http://goome@xeiaso.gl/forms/x9u11MCmJ1'''<br />net email]
All are welcome to an afternoon datathon, put together as part of Code4LibSouthest. The event is free and open to all, although we do ask for you to register using this form so we can have a head count.==Nate Matias==
The first 2 hours will involve skillshares and workshops around data retrieval[https:/munging tools, scripts, and workflows/natematias. Let us know if you have a skill that you would like to help others learn - some topics include OpenRefinecom/LODRefine, Google Docs + Scripting, writing XSLT, working Dr. J. Nathan Matias] is a social scientist and Cornell faculty member who "stud[ies] digital governance and behavior change in groups and networks shaped by AI systems" and "collaborate[s] with library data the public in python, open source ontology editorscitizen behavioral science, working with open data APIs, understanding for a world where digital power is guided by evidence and accountable to the RDF data model, etcpublic. We will add confirmed topics for " His research includes concrete interventions to improve the skillshare part quality of the event agenda as they are confirmed discourse and safety in online communities. These days, he's interested in speaking on our Google Groups page AI governance, "community- see led field experiments in computing, social-psychology, and technology governance", and independent, non-corporate research. He is an [https://groups.googlenatematias.com/forum/#!topic/code4lib-sespeaking/experienced public speaker] and also one of the nicest people you will ever meet. Please know that all data skills are welcome!
Skills to be Shared:* Metadata munging with XQuery, including roundtripping MARC to/from other XML metadata formats using [https://githubsocial.comcoop/ksclarke/freelib-marc4j-exist -- Kevin Clarke@natematias mastodon]* Perl + MARC/RDF munging -- Galen Charlton* WOS, sci2 + network visualizations -- Cody Behles* Depending on time[mailto: DPLA API, LODRefine (Linked Open Data Refine) & Open Authorities Reconciliation -- Christina Harlownathan.matias@cornell.edu email]
We'll then take a coffee and food break as needed. Some coffee, tea and local treats from Magpie's Bakery will be provided.== Luis von Ahn ==
The second 2 hours will consist of breakout sessions where groups of folks can work with datasets using the tools/skills picked upLuis von Ahn holds a PhD in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University. We invite people to bring their own datasets that need any kind of work - encoding issuesHis thesis, normalizing headingscompleted in 2005, mapping was the first publication to other formats, pulling in URIs. If you don't bring your own data, we'll use datasets from UTK and the DPLA term "human computation", referring to methods that need work normalizing and mapping names/subjects of regional interest. Attendees are invited to sit and learn or work on their own data - whatever you feel most comfortable combine human brainpower with doing. Please register below, and let us know if you are 1. able computers to share skills or 2. will be bringing your own data. Neither of these are required for attendance. Questions or issues? Email Christina at charlow2@utk.edu Travel information is being sent directly to those registered. Ask Christina if you didn't receive thesesolve problems that neither could solve alone.