papers-we-love/austin — explained in plain English
Analysis updated 2026-07-17 · repo last pushed 2016-06-20
Find and join a monthly Austin meetup to discuss academic CS papers with other engineers.
Pick a foundational or cutting-edge paper to read and present to the group for feedback.
Use paper discussions to understand the theory behind tools you already use, like databases or ML models.
Connect with other Papers We Love chapters in different cities via the wider organization.
| papers-we-love/austin | 0marildo/imago | 100/geotwitter | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | 3 | 3 | 3 |
| Language | — | Python | Python |
| Last pushed | 2016-06-20 | — | 2015-09-10 |
| Maintenance | Dormant | — | Dormant |
| Setup difficulty | — | easy | moderate |
| Complexity | 1/5 | 2/5 | 3/5 |
| Audience | developer | general | general |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
Papers We Love Austin is a monthly meetup group for programmers and tech-minded people in Austin, Texas who want to dive deep into academic computer science papers. Instead of just scrolling through tech news, members gather to discuss and learn from published research that's shaped how we build software today. The group meets on the third Wednesday of each month at Cognitive Scale's offices in Austin. People bring papers they find interesting, anything from foundational algorithms to cutting-edge machine learning research, and discuss what they learned, why it matters, and how it connects to real problems they're solving. It's part book club, part study group, designed to fill gaps in programming education and keep people current with what researchers are actually publishing. This would appeal to anyone who wants to go deeper than surface-level tech content. Developers often learn on the job or from tutorials, but academic papers cover fundamental ideas in ways that tutorials skip over. A backend engineer might explore a paper on distributed systems to understand why their databases behave the way they do. A machine learning person might read something on a core algorithm to grasp what's really happening under the hood. Even if you're not a researcher, understanding these papers makes you a stronger engineer and helps you make better decisions when designing systems. The Austin chapter is part of a larger Papers We Love organization with similar groups in other cities. All participants follow a code of conduct to keep the environment welcoming and respectful. If you're in Austin and curious, the group has a Meetup page where you can find upcoming discussions and RSVP.
A monthly Austin, Texas meetup where programmers read and discuss academic computer science papers together, part of the wider Papers We Love network.
Dormant — no commits in 2+ years (last push 2016-06-20).
Mainly developer.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
double-check against the repo, no cap.