class: middle .center[ <img src="assets/figures/wutchty_teams.jpg" width="80%"></img> ] .footnote[Wuchty et al. 2007 [*The Increasing Dominance of Teams in Production of Knowledge*](http://science.sciencemag.org/content/316/5827/1036)] ??? #### an increasingly collaborative world --- class: middle, center <img src="assets/figures/dropbox.png" style="width:30%"> <img src="assets/figures/onedrive.png" style="width:28%"> <img src="assets/figures/googledrive.jpg" style="width:28%"> ??? #### collaboration tools --- class: middle on the utility of GitHub  .footnote[<hr>we’ll git there, slowly but surely. Mine Çetinkaya-Rundel. Duke University Statistical Science] ??? #### on the utility of GitHub --- class: middle, center <img src="assets/figures/GitHubCollaboration - solo.png" width="35%"></img> ??? #### version control with Git and GitHub --- a shared repository or team environment makes collaborating with GitHub very easy .center[ <img src="assets/figures/GitHubCollaboration - team.png" width="60%"></img> ] ??? #### shared repository --- <br> .center[ <img src="assets/figures/git_for_humans.png" width="100%"></img> ] ??? #### recall the example from Alice --- another way .center[ <img src="assets/figures/GitHubCollaboration - fork.png" width="75%"></img> ] ??? #### collaboration with GitHub - forking --- forking is invaluable but in itself does not facilitate complete synchronization .center[ <img src="assets/figures/GitHubCollaboration - push-to-fork.png" width="70%"></img> ] ??? #### collaboration with GitHub - forking --- class: middle, center <img src="assets/figures/GitHubCollaboration - pull-request.png" width="75%"></img> ??? #### collaboration with GitHub - pull request --- class: middle, center <img src="assets/figures/soil-organic-matter.png" width="90%"> ??? #### real-world example: cross-site soil organic matter synthesis