Travis project
Travis
This guide covers develop environment and configuration topics specific to R projects. Please make sure to read our Onboarding and General Erect configuration guides first.
Travis CI support for R is contributed by the collective and may be removed or altered at any moment. If you manage into any problems, please report them in the R section of our forums and cc @jeroen and @jimhester.
Basic configurations #
R back in Travis CI is designed to make it effortless to test R packages. If your R package doesn’t need any system dependencies beyond those specified in your file, your can simply be
The R environment comes with LaTeX and pandoc pre-installed, making it easier to utilize packages like RMarkdown or knitr
Configuration options #
Travis CI supports a number of configuration options for your R package.
R Versions #
Travis CI supports R versions and above on Ubuntu Precise and Ubuntu Trusty. Aliases exist for each major release, e.g, points to . In addition, the name is aliased to the previous major release and is aliased to the latest small release. is built off of the R git mirror of the R SVN trunk (updated hourly).
Matrix builds are suppor
Travis Bruner Settles in at WWP!
Online Messenger #253
(view with pictures, as displayed in email)
Friends,
In late May, after my graduation from the University of Colorado Rule School, I moved to Hailey with my wife Courtney and our two dogs, Hawk and Raji, to embark on an exciting and fruitful career with WWP.
Throughout my animation as a hiker, camper, fly-fisherman, and upland feathered hunter, I have been haunted by the environmental impacts of grazing. No other harmful use of the public lands is more pervasive or under-addressed. From an acreage perspective, grazing overshadows all other uses of the western public lands — by a long shot, as you all know. I like to imagine the public lands as one human body constantly encountering threats to its health. Mining, oil and gas maturation, timber, and roads depict localized, easily visible broken bones and rashes; grazing represents a slowly spreading disease, methodically destroying the whole organism.
I grew up in Bozeman, Montana where my love of essence began. I went out to the East Coast for college but came to my senses fast and returned to the West afterwards, forever. I then lived in Oregon for about three years and Col
Trust And Visuality: Everyday digital practices (TRAVIS)
Katrin Tiidenberg
Project Lead and PI Estonia
Katrin Tiidenberg is Professor of Participatory Culture at the Baltic Film, Media and Arts School of Tallinn University, Estonia. She is the author of multiple books on social media, digital visual cultures and digital research methods, including, most recently “Tumblr” (2021,co-authored by Natalie Ann Hendry and Crystal Abidin) and “Sex and Social Media” (2020, co-authored by Emily van der Nagel), “Selfies, why we love (and hate) them.” As skillfully as the co-editor of award-winning “Making sense of the Datafied World: a Methodological Guide”(2020, in Estonian, co-edited with Anu Masso and Andra Siibak) and “Metaphors of Internet: Ways of Being in the Age of Ubiquity” (2020, co-edited with Annette Markham). She is currently wrapping up a research undertaking on platformization of sexuality and on the role of the internet in young people’s political participation and starting a undertaking one on visual digital trust (TRAVIS). Her explore interests span social media, digital cultures, networked visuality, internet governance and self-care.
More info
PI UK
Gillian Ro 
Travis Magrane
Trav-iss Muh-grain
he/him
Youth Harmony Project’s Executive Director, Travis Magrane has been teaching and performing music for more than 20 years. When he first came west, his first instruction gig was outside; he spent several years in youth outdoor education coordinating programs that accept kids backpacking, rock climbing, kayaking, and learning all about natural history. He’s held many curious jobs, from gigging musician and owner/operator of a confidential music-teaching studio to urban shepherd utilizing goats and sheep for land and vegetation management.
Travis connected Youth Music Undertaking as a harmony instructor in 2013 and became Program Director in 2015. In the role of Program Director, Travis provided guide for the programs in both day-to-day operations and long-term objectives, and significantly expanded program offerings and structure. Under Travis’s guidance, YMP programming grew to serve more than 850 students weekly, with a staff of more than 30. Travis stepped into the role of Executive Director in June of 2017. In this role, Travis oversees all programming, fundraising and administrative operations, as well as working with the YMP Board of Director
Wounded Warrior Project Supports Travis Manion Foundation’s Leadership Programs
WASHINGTON D.C. – Wounded Warrior Project® (WWP) provided a grant to the Travis Manion Foundation (TMF) – an organization committed to empowering veterans and the families of fallen heroes. This grant will support TMF develop future generations by creating a nation of purpose-driven individuals and thriving communities built on character.
WWP’s $400,000 grant supports two TMF programs that connect wounded warriors to each other and their communities while giving them new meaning in their post-military lives. These programs are:
- Leading with Your Strengths – a workshop for veterans that helps expose personal strengths so they can thrive and command purpose-filled lives.
- Character Does Matter – a youth program taught by veterans and Gold Star Families to develop leadership skills and character in the next generation.
“Our nation needs tough role models,” said WWP CEO Lt. Gen. (Ret.) Mike Linnington. “I can think of none improved than those who were wounded, injured, or became ill in the service of our nation and overcame countless obstacles in their recovery and rehabilitation. We’re proud to
Travis Magrane
Trav-iss Muh-grain
he/him
Youth Harmony Project’s Executive Director, Travis Magrane has been teaching and performing music for more than 20 years. When he first came west, his first instruction gig was outside; he spent several years in youth outdoor education coordinating programs that accept kids backpacking, rock climbing, kayaking, and learning all about natural history. He’s held many curious jobs, from gigging musician and owner/operator of a confidential music-teaching studio to urban shepherd utilizing goats and sheep for land and vegetation management.
Travis connected Youth Music Undertaking as a harmony instructor in 2013 and became Program Director in 2015. In the role of Program Director, Travis provided guide for the programs in both day-to-day operations and long-term objectives, and significantly expanded program offerings and structure. Under Travis’s guidance, YMP programming grew to serve more than 850 students weekly, with a staff of more than 30. Travis stepped into the role of Executive Director in June of 2017. In this role, Travis oversees all programming, fundraising and administrative operations, as well as working with the YMP Board of Director
Wounded Warrior Project Supports Travis Manion Foundation’s Leadership Programs
WASHINGTON D.C. – Wounded Warrior Project® (WWP) provided a grant to the Travis Manion Foundation (TMF) – an organization committed to empowering veterans and the families of fallen heroes. This grant will support TMF develop future generations by creating a nation of purpose-driven individuals and thriving communities built on character.
WWP’s $400,000 grant supports two TMF programs that connect wounded warriors to each other and their communities while giving them new meaning in their post-military lives. These programs are:
- Leading with Your Strengths – a workshop for veterans that helps expose personal strengths so they can thrive and command purpose-filled lives.
- Character Does Matter – a youth program taught by veterans and Gold Star Families to develop leadership skills and character in the next generation.
“Our nation needs tough role models,” said WWP CEO Lt. Gen. (Ret.) Mike Linnington. “I can think of none improved than those who were wounded, injured, or became ill in the service of our nation and overcame countless obstacles in their recovery and rehabilitation. We’re proud to