MATLAB Without Borders: Advancing Engineering Workflows
Overview
Accelerate innovation in your startup with engineering workflows designed for agility and scale. This webinar is tailored for founders, technical leads, and engineers at startups who want to maximize productivity and leverage the best tools available.
Discover how MATLAB can seamlessly integrate with widely used languages like Python and C/C++, empowering your team to develop robust, flexible solutions that drive your business forward. Learn how to incorporate MATLAB into collaborative environments such as Jupyter Notebooks and Visual Studio Code, streamlining development and communication across your organization.
Key takeaways:
- Integrate MATLAB with other programming languages to create efficient, adaptable workflows for your startup’s evolving needs.
- Use MATLAB within Jupyter Notebooks and Visual Studio Code to enhance team collaboration, documentation, and rapid prototyping.
- Apply the latest integration strategies and features to accelerate problem-solving and bring innovative products to market faster.
Who Should Attend
Whether you’re building your MVP or scaling your engineering operations, see how a borderless approach to workflows can help your startup achieve its goals. This session will include time for live Q&A.
Can’t attend live? Register to receive the on-demand recording.
About the Presenter
María Elena Gavilán is a Principal Technical Program Manager at MathWorks, helping engineers and researchers drive innovation with MATLAB and Simulink. With expertise in C/C++, Python, and MATLAB, she supports teams integrating MATLAB with open-source tools for AI, simulation, and physical modeling. María has industry experience in automotive and aerospace CFD projects, and her interests include autonomous systems, turbulence modeling, and climate tech. She holds degrees in Physics (National University of Colombia), Aerospace Engineering (Purdue), and an MBA (UIUC).
Mike Croucher is a Community Developer advocate at MathWorks with over 25 years' experience supporting researchers in a range of languages including Python, C++, R and, of course, MATLAB. In academia, Mike was the co-founder of The University of Sheffield’s Research Software Engineering group, one of the first such groups in the world and has been a supporter of the Research Software Engineering movement since its inception. At MathWorks, he is author of ‘The MATLAB Blog’ and focuses on Open Source, High Performance Computing and Research Software Engineering workflows.