Computer Science
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Frequently Asked Questions
Yes! Check out computer science events happening today here. These are in-person gatherings where you can meet fellow enthusiasts and participate in activities right now.
Discover all the computer science events taking place this week here. Plan ahead and join exciting meetups throughout the week.
Absolutely! Find computer science events near your location here. Connect with your local community and discover events within your area.
Computer Science Events Today
Join in-person Computer Science events happening right now
📣 AI Council 2026
**[AI Council](http://aicouncil.com/) 2026 is coming to San Francisco, May 12-14!**
It's our only IRL conference of the year, and we couldn't be more excited to bring the AI community together at the Marriott Marquis in SOMA.
This is a ticketed event — as a member of our meetups, you can enjoy 20% off Regular and Late-Bird tickets with the code: **DCMEETUP20**
**About Us:** [AI Council](http://aicouncil.com/) is the original community-driven, deeply technical conference at the frontier of AI. We have a No BS Guarantee: we're vendor neutral, and we promise all of our talks are engaging, technical, and presented by top engineers and researchers doing the real work. For years, we've been running the best community-powered AI events around, and we invite you to join us for high quality talks and inspiring conversations with the people actually building the future of AI.
**Why Should I Go:**
* 🎤 **Incredible Speaker Lineup:** 3 days and 60+ insightful talks from leading AI engineers, researchers, and builders from top companies like Anthropic, OpenAI, Meta, Databricks, and many more.
* 🏎 **10 Unique Tracks:** Inference Systems, AI Engineering, AI Security & Safety, Agent Infrastructure, Coding Agents & Autonomous Dev, Model Systems, Data Engineering & Databases, Applied AI, Analytics & Data Science, and Lightning Talks
* 📋 **Workshops (hands-on, peer-led):** Try out the latest tools alongside their creators, get hands-on experience with cutting-edge products, and meet some of the most talented builders in the industry, for free!
* 💬 **Speaker Office Hours:** Following each talk, you get the opportunity to dive deeper 1:1 with the speaker
* 🎈 **Extensive Networking:** Conference happy hours and amazing after-hours events hosted by community partners throughout the week
\*\*\*
*As a member of our meetups, you can enjoy 20% off Regular and Late-Bird tickets with the code **DCMEETUP20***
**NOTE:** This is a ticketed event. Check out our [website](http://aicouncil.com/) to purchase tickets and get complete information on speakers and schedule.
Join the global AI community in San Francisco for the most technical, no-hype AI event of the year — we'll see you there!
London Clojure Dojo at uSwitch
uSwitch is located on the first floor of the ZPG building at 5 Copper Row, London, SE1 2LH, London (Click on the map for directions)
What 3 words location: [https://what3words.com/puts.sudden.else](https://what3words.com/puts.sudden.else)
The Clojure dojo is a collaborative way to learn Clojure/ClojureScript through practice. The aim is to learn a little more than before you started. This event is for those new to coding through to more experienced developers.
We organise into small groups (2-4) people and write code to solve challenges great and small, chosen by those at the event.
We aim to ensure someone in your group has some Clojure experience, so you shouldn't feel lost (well no more than all developers do when Stack Overflow is broken).
Example challenges for the coding dojo are listed on this website: http://www.londonclojurians.org/code-dojo/
Various past exercises have been loaded to
[https://github.com/ldnclj](https://github.com/ldnclj/lisp1.5/blob/master/src/lisp1/5.clj)
# Approximate schedule:
18:40 Doors open and start collecting suggestions
18.45 Pizza should have arrived
19:00 Quick intros and vote on suggestions
19:15 Break out into groups and start practising
20:45 Gather together for a quick show and tell
# What should I bring?
We organise into small groups, so if you have a laptop with a working Clojure environment please bring it along (there are lots of online Clojure environments, so you can just use your browser too).
# How do I get in to the building?
At the glass doors press the buzzer to inform the security guard you are here. Say you are here for the event on the first floor.
Is there way to talk with the Clojure community?
Why yes. The Clojurians Slack channel is full of friendly people who love to try and help. People based in London are often in the #clojure-uk channel. Sign up for a free account to the Clojurians Slack community via http://clojurians.net/
What is Clojure?
Clojure is a JVM language that has syntactically similarities to Lisp, full integration with Java and its libraries and focuses on providing a solution to the issue of single machine concurrency.
Its small core makes it surprisingly easy for Java developers to pick up and it provides a powerful set of concurrency strategies and data structures designed to make immutable data easy to work with. If you went to Rich Hickey’s LJC talk about creating Clojure you’ll already know this, if not it’s well worth watching the Rich Hickey “Clojure for Java Programmers” video or Stuart Halloway “Radical Simplicity” video .
Women in UX: May Informal Networking Drinks🥤
Hiya Women in UX!
We’re so excited to host our next informal networking drinks of this year, on 12 May! Join us to talk about all things UX design, research, content and... probably AI, let's be honest.
📍We'll meet at Two Floors on Kingly street, right next to Cahoots. When in doubt, ask for Andrea.
🌟If there are no more available spots left here, you can also RSVP ON [EVENTBRITE](https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/women-in-ux-may-informal-networking-drinks-tickets-1986946270783?aff=oddtdtcreator). Spaces are limited so book sooner rather than later as it's first come first served.
🍸 Please note that this event isn’t sponsored, so any drinks you order will need to be paid for at the bar.
💌 Stay connected with us by following our [LinkedIn](http://linkedin.com/company/women-in-ux).
See you there xx
Women in UX
A Sci Fi/Fantasy Writing Session
**DUE TO LIMITED SPACE PLEASE ONLY RSVP IF ATTENDING. IF NO LONGER ATTENDING PLEASE UPDATE YOUR RSVP.**
Join us in the upstairs room of the Grafton Pub in Camden for another writing-focused session.
Bring whatever you’re working on, whether you’re outlining a new idea or deep into your current WIP. This is a space for writers to connect, share ideas, and find inspiration. Whether you’re looking for feedback, want to brainstorm with others, or simply need a quiet place to write, our goal is to build a supportive and collaborative community for sci-fi and fantasy authors at all stages of their journey.
Writing will start at 6:30, but feel free to arrive and leave at your own convenience! We will end at 8:30pm, but the pub is open till 11pm so after it ends people can mingle or go home as they please. **While we encourage collaboration and occasional chat, we ask everyone to be mindful of those focused on writing until 8pm.**
**Also please support the venue by buying food or drink from the pub!**
Emacs London meetup
Join us for our next Emacs London meetup held at University College London (UCL). A projector will be available, if anyone wants to give a presentation and/or if helpful to share Emacs tips, for some collaborative debugging, etc.
We might head to a pub for a drink and/or a nibble afterward.
Emacs users of all levels welcome! Interested in Emacs but not really a user? You're more than welcome too!
**Call for presentations**
Fancy talking about your favourite Emacs package? Proud of your latest Emacs Lisp hack and you want to tell everybody? Anything parenthesis-related that's bugging you? There'll be a monitor waiting for you for a short presentation!
Rencontre du mardi
Nous irons au Corner Cafe (Tate Modern) afin de bavarder en francais apres le travail autour d'un verre. Nous y serons a partir de 18h 30.
Une petite participation de £1 sera demandee.
Transformation Truths
*Why most transformations fail — and what leaders must do differently*
With trillions of dollars spent on digital transformation globally each year, the results
are sobering: only 20–30% of initiatives achieve their intended outcomes.
In this talk, Susan draws on firsthand experience leading both successful and failed transformations to explore why — and what leaders can do differently.
Structured in four acts, the session moves from the hard reality of transformation failure
to the underlying patterns behind it, arriving at four practical truths every leader must
accept:
• Transformation is never the goal — business value is
• Political capital is finite and must be managed deliberately
• Early focus matters more than destination planning
• Measurement should enable learning, not be used as a weapon
The talk closes with two grounding questions every leader should be able to answer
before launching any transformation — practical, honest, and hard-won from the field.
**Speaker Bio**
Susan Rohde is the founder of Rohde Inc. and a technology executive with decades of
experience guiding public and private sector organizations through complex, high-
stakes transformation. Her career spans executive leadership at a top-five national bank,
a large state government, and six years as Senior Consultant to a major federal agency —
where she helped lead one of the most ambitious project-to-product transformations in
the federal government.
As a BVSSH Advocate, Susan is part of Jon Smart's global community of practitioners
committed to helping organizations achieve Better Value Sooner Safer Happier. She
brings a practitioner's lens to transformation — having both delivered change for others
and led it herself from the inside.
Susan has presented at the AWS Public Sector Summit, the DevOps Enterprise Summit,
and multiple national forums on Agile, transformation, and technology leadership.
Computer Science Events This Week
Discover what is happening in the next few days
Inner Critic Reset in the Park — Mindfulness, Self Compassion & Connection
The sun is out, the evenings are longer, and we thought what better way to spend a May evening than slowing down together in one of London's most beautiful parks.
> This is a small, gentle outdoor workshop where we'll explore the inner critic. That voice that tells you you're not enough, not doing enough, not where you should be. Through a mix of mindfulness exercises, self compassion practice, and real conversation, we'll spend the evening reconnecting with ourselves and each other.
> You don't need any experience with meditation or mindfulness. Just bring yourself, maybe a blanket to sit on, and an open mind.
> This is for you if:
> You tend to be your own harshest critic. You feel like you're always running but never arriving. You want to meet genuine people in a meaningful way. You just need an evening to breathe.
> 📍 Regent's Park, London (exact meeting point shared before the event)
> 📅 Saturday 16 May 2026
> ⏰ 6PM - 8PM
> 💷 £10
> 🌿 Outdoors, weather permitting
> Brought to you by Idil and Shipra. We're passionate about mindfulness, self compassion, and creating spaces where people can be real with each other.
> Places are limited to keep it intimate. Grab your spot and we'll see you in the park 🤍
The Unscented Transform: Theory and Bayesian Applications
**The Unscented Transform: theory, extensions and practical application to Bayesian inference**
We are delighted to have John Whitamore back at the Bayesian Mixer. Please register here: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/bayesianmixer/2154878
**Abstract:** How can we perform Bayesian inference without resorting to slow random sampling methods? Isn't there a nice, pragmatic way to use the geometry of a problem to use only a very small number of samples, placed deterministically? Isn't there a good, straightforward way to implement Bayesian models in practical settings?
This talk explains the real-world problems that can be solved by the Unscented Transform. It begins with an intuitive introduction to Bayesian methods, discusses the Unscented Transform and connects the ideas to geometry, finite elements analysis and deep learning.
**Bio:** John Whitamore is a Senior Data Scientist at Simply Business, a leading UK InsureTech firm. He has previously served as Head of Data Science for a leading food retailer, as Head of Trading and Systems for an investment management company and as Global Head of Convertible Bond Trading for a European investment bank.
Scala Talks: Functional Programming in Rust & Caching using Ref
🎉 Come along to the London Scala Talks! 🎉
In this event you'll hear from Caroline Morton and Katrina Petrevice.
**Agenda**
6:00pm - 🥤 Doors open. Come along and grab a drink!
6:35pm - 🗣️ Introduction
6:40pm - 🗣️ Katrina Petrevice: Caching in Scala using Ref
7:20pm - 🍕 Intermission: Join us for some free food and drinks! Vegan and vegetarian options are provided. Let us know if you'd like something special - we'd be happy to accommodate.
7:50pm - 🗣️ Caroline Morton: Accidental Functional Programming in Rust (From an Epidemiologist's Perspective)
8:30pm - 🥤 Socialising: Grab a drink and let's discuss the talks.
9:00pm - 🍻 Join us in a pub to discuss the talks!
🌐 **This event may have a live stream**
Watch this space for more details.
**🗣️ Katrina Petrevice: Caching in Scala using Ref**
Caching in memory is often one of the first strategies used to improve system performances. However, implementing caching in a purely functional way introduces unique challenges, specifically around state management and testability. In this talk, we will look at how to utilise functional programming principles with [Ref](https://typelevel.org/cats-effect/docs/std/ref), while maintaining clarity and composability. We will also deep dive into some common pitfalls and look into practical ways to test Ref effectively.
⭐ Katrina Petrevice ⭐
Katrina comes from a non–computer science background and was first introduced to Scala while working at JPMorgan. She credits much of her Scala knowledge to hands-on experience within her team, where she works on building and maintaining data pipelines and managing data systems. Since then, she has developed a strong interest in functional programming and now co-leads the Functional Programming Group at JPMorgan, where she helps share knowledge and foster a community around these ideas.
**🗣️ Caroline Morton: Accidental Functional Programming in Rust (From an Epidemiologist's Perspective)**
I don't have a background in functional programming - and I never set out to write it. But somewhere between writing trait-based epidemiological pipelines, composing data transformations, and leaning hard on Result, enums, and pattern matching, I started hearing from others: “That's pretty functional.”
In this talk, I'll explore what it means to write “functional-ish” Rust as someone solving real-world scientific problems. I'll walk through the patterns I reach for - like chaining iterators, avoiding shared state, and embracing expressive types - and reflect on which functional programming ideas emerge naturally in Rust, even if you're not trying.
I'll also share how designing for epidemiologists - most of whom are used to chaining functions in Python (like Pandas) or R - has pushed me toward creating ergonomic Rust APIs with Python and R bindings. These tools aim to feel familiar to scientists while leveraging Rust's power and safety under the hood.
This is a talk for functional programmers curious about Rust, and for Rustaceans wondering if they've been functional all along. No formal theory required - just real code, real use cases, and a pragmatic perspective from someone building public health tools in Rust.
⭐ Caroline Morton ⭐
Dr. Caroline Morton is a medical doctor, epidemiologist, software engineer, and PhD candidate specialising in synthetic data, epidemiology, and Rust. With 60 peer-reviewed papers and two books on software, she combines deep technical expertise with a commitment to improving scientific workflows.
Caroline co-founded the first [Women in Rust](https://www.meetup.com/women-in-rust/) group, fostering diversity and encouraging more women to explore opportunities in systems programming. She leads an open-source project improving codelist management in epidemiology using Rust, creating efficient, reliable tools for health data research.
Her PhD focuses on synthetic data methods for epidemiology, particularly using Rust to generate large, realistic datasets. A strong advocate for open science and reproducibility, she contributes extensively to improving software practices through publications, workshops, and open-source projects.
————————————————————
🗣️ Would you like to present, but are not sure how to start? Give a talk with us and you'll receive mentorship from a trained toastmaster! Get in touch through [this form](https://forms.gle/zv5i9eeto1BsnSwe8) and we'll get you started
🏡 Interested in hosting or supporting us? Please get in touch through [this form](https://forms.gle/3SX3Bm6zHqVodBaMA) and we can discuss how you can get involved.
📜 All London Scala User Group events operate under the [Scala Community Code of Conduct](https://www.scala-lang.org/conduct/).
We encourage each of you to report the breach of the conduct, either anonymously through [this form](https://forms.gle/9PMMorUWgBnbk1mm6) or by contacting one of our team members. We guarantee privacy and confidentiality, as well as that we will take your report seriously and react quickly.
IN PERSON STUDY & CONVERSATION GROUP - OCCULT SCIENCE
IN PERSON STUDY & CONVERSATION GROUP - OCCULT SCIENCE
WITH DAGMAR STEFFELBAUER
**Occult Science is a written book by Rudolf Steiner and is meant for studying the content. It is composed of VII**
**chapters. We have begun with chapter V which will be studied throughout thisterm. Its content is the spiritual path of**
**the Knowledge of the Higher Worlds. We are using the translation by George and Mary Adams.**
**All are welcome!**
**Further information: d.steffelbauer@gmail.com**
This group is run under the auspices of the Anthroposophical Society in Great Britain and small donations towards expenses are welcome.
£ 3 / £2 .
DSF Big Birthday Bash 2026
✨🎊 Welcome to DSF Big Birthday Bash 🎊✨
THE TICKET BALLOT IS NOW OPEN!
Click the link below to enter the ballot 👇
[Click here!!!](https://datasciencefestival.com/event/big-birthday-bash-2026/?utm_source=social&utm_medium=meetup&utm_campaign=bigbdaybash)
Join us on Saturday 16th May 2026, for our 12th Festival, at our London home CodeNode, celebrating DSF turning 10, for one day only!
Enter the ticket ballot to be in with a chance of attending. 600 lucky people will get to attend this event for free 🎟️
40 speakers, 4 stream rooms, 14 partners, lunch, swag bags, and an entire day to learn, mingle, and be inspired!
Event time: 08:15 AM - 18:00 PM
Venue address: CodeNode, 10 South Pl, London, EC2M 7EB
Nearest tube station: Moorgate or Liverpool Street
Schedule and speaker details are updated weekly [here.](https://datasciencefestival.com/event/big-birthday-bash-2026/?utm_source=social&utm_medium=meetup&utm_campaign=bigbdaybash)
Please note this event will not be streamed, so please ensure you apply for a ballot ticket to watch these sessions live.
**PLEASE NOTE: CLICKING ATTENDING ON MEETUP DOES NOT GIVE YOU ACCESS TO THIS EVENT. PLEASE FOLLOW THE LINK ABOVE OR BELOW TO REGISTER FOR TICKETS**.
Ticketing: Due to the popularity of Data Science Festival events, we are now allocating event tickets via a random ballot. Registering enters you into the ticket ballot for DSF Big Birthday Bash on Saturday 16th May 2026. The ballot will be drawn throughout the month of April 2026. If you have not received a ticket by May 7th 2026, unfortunately, you have been unsuccessful in getting a ticket. Those who are randomly selected will then be e-mailed tickets for the event. Please read how the ticketing works in full here. ([[https://datasciencefestival.com/2024/01/01/dsf-tickets-101-mayday-2024/](https://datasciencefestival.com/2024/01/01/dsf-tickets-101-mayday-2024/)]([https://datasciencefestival.com/2024/01/01/dsf-tickets-101-mayday-2024/](https://datasciencefestival.com/2024/01/01/dsf-tickets-101-mayday-2024/)))
Event details:
🎟️ Please bring your ticket (a paper copy or on your phone) to the event to check in with your QR code. Tickets are non-transferable. Arrive before 10:00 AM for guaranteed entry.
☕️ There is no breakfast at the venue, however, there is tea, coffee, and water provided throughout the day. Lunch is also provided. Soft drinks and alcohol can be purchased from SpaceBar at Code Node.
⌚️ Doors will open at 8:15 AM sharp and attendee registration will begin at this time on Saturday 16th May 2026. Speaker sessions begin at 9:00 AM, but please arrive at least 45 minutes before the conference begins, to make sure you enter the event on time. Arrive before 10:00 AM for guaranteed entry.
📛 Please pick up your badge, schedule and SWAG bag at the registration table on the ground floor.
🤝 There will be networking at the Spacebar from 17:00 - 18:00 PM so come and say hello!
FAQ will be live in April 2026. Please take some time to review this ahead of the event.
Check out last year's DSF Game On here:
[https://datasciencefestival.com/event/game-on-2025/](https://datasciencefestival.com/event/game-on-2025/)
We can't wait to see you back in person! 👋
**#DSFBigBirthdayBash**
Meetup #16 Reimagining Software Development With AI
Shaping our future with AI. Creating opportunity through AI fluency, connection and community.
No jargon. No hype. No confusing terminology.
NOTE: This event will be focussed on the changing shape of software development. Everyone is welcome to attend but the content will be somewhat technical.
**Join us for our next in-person meetup in London on Thursday May 14th.**
Our theme for this meetup is **Reimagining Software Development with AI.** We're going to take a step back and think about the role we, the humans, play in the software development process now that coding agents have arrived.
This event provides a small glimpse of the future, from the innovators who are challenging everything and rebuilding the process of software development from the ground up, with humans at the centre!
**Where and When?**
* Thursday, May 14th
* Doors open at 18:00
* Talks start at 19:00
* AutogenAI, 123 Pentonville Rd, London N1 9LG
**Talk 1: The Validation Gap: We Need A Better Way To Review AI Generated Code** (Robert Werner, Co-Founder & CTO Leapter)
AI coding is fast. We're generating more code than ever. But more code means more code to verify, and agentic workflows are scaling that gap faster than review processes can keep up.
The bottleneck didn't disappear. It moved from writing code to verifying logic.
For most generated code, you can ship, test, and iterate. But what if we need to be sure? What about the code that runs our financial systems or decides if you qualify for a loan? It has to be right.
Hope is not a strategy, we need to better ways to review code. In this talk Robert will share his recent innovations, experiments and insights with you.
**About Robert:**
Robert Werner is the CTO of an AI startup dedicated to shaping the future of AI-native software development. He has over 20 years experience focussed on Software Engineering, Developer Experience and Transformational Platform Engineering, across Fortune 500 companies and FinTechs.
**Talk 2: Narrative Engineering: What Cognitive Science Actually Tells Us About Building with LLMs** (Sal Kimmich, Security Architect at Gadfly AI)
We keep treating LLMs like search engines that hallucinate. That is the wrong category, and it produces the wrong engineering.
LLMs are narrative generators. They do not retrieve facts or execute logic. They complete stories. That distinction is not philosophical. It determines what kind of system you can build with them and what kind you cannot. Neuroscience has been studying probabilistic, distributed, narrative-generating systems for decades. Most of the LLM engineering field is ignoring that work.
This talk walks through cyberneutics, an open source methodology and repository built on the premise that we need a new engineering discipline for narrative computing the way software engineering emerged from symbolic computing. The theoretical foundations come from second-order cybernetics, distributed cognition, and Minsky's Society of Mind. The empirical validation comes from 2025 mechanistic interpretability research showing that reasoning models internally simulate multi-agent dialogue to reason better. The practical techniques come from iterative practice: adversarial committees, pipeline algebra with formal quality propagation, observer-aware interaction design.
Three real lessons for practitioners building agentic systems: reliability is a property of the pipeline, not the prompt; repetition is latent space exploration, not failure; and if you want auditable AI reasoning, you need to externalise the dialogue structure, because the transcript is the explainability artifact.
The discipline does not exist yet. This is what building it looks like.
**About Sal:** Sal is a developer advocate for open source and passionate about helping engineers, ethical hackers and digital enthusiasts understand the complexity of modern software development. With over a decade of experience as building cloud-native machine learning pipelines in the healthcare and tech for good sectors, their work is now focused on filling the cracks in the open source software supply chain to build a better digital future for all of us.
**Thanks!**
We'd like to thank our sponsors [Leapter ](http://leapter.com/)and AutogenAI for making this event possible.
**Code of Conduct**
This event has a code of conduct that you can [review here.](https://aifortherestofus.live/code-of-conduct) By joining the community and registering for this event you agree to abide by our code of conduct.
**Providing Your Name and Email**
To register for this event you'll be asked to provide your email address. After the event you will be automatically subscribed to the newsletters from *AI for the rest of us* and Leapter GmbH. You can unsubscribe at any time (But why would you? They are really very good!)
Building with MCP
MCP is changing how developers build with AI, but we're just scratching the surface. Join us for an evening of talks that go beyond retrieval to explore what's actually possible when you give agents real tools, real constraints and real APIs.
**Agenda**
6:00 PM - Doors open, registration and networking
6:10 PM - Welcome (Upsun & Cloudflare)
6:20 PM - MCP: Context is Everything! - Carly Richmond, Elastic
6:45 PM - Sandboxes: how to limit agents so we can use them more - Patrick Dawkins, Upsun
7:00 PM - Break (Food & Drinks)
7:30 PM - Cooking with MCP in VS Code - Liam Hampton, Microsoft
7:55 PM - Efficient tools with MCP code mode - Confidence Okoghenun, Cloudflare
8:15 PM - Open networking and drinks
9:00 PM - Close
🗣️ **Talks**
**MCP: Context is Everything! - Carly Richmond (Developer Advocate Lead, Elastic)**
MCP is a powerful tool for giving LLMs capabilities to not just retrieve information, but to automate key actions based on relevant data. Let’s see how it can be used for retrieving relevant context and other activities such as observability.
**Efficient tools with MCP code mode - Confidence Okoghenun (Senior Developer Advocate, Cloudflare)**
Traditional MCP approaches choke on context windows: Cloudflare's 2,500+ endpoint API would require 1.17 million tokens. Code Mode flips the script by having LLMs write code against typed APIs instead of making direct tool calls, achieving 99.9% token reduction. Come learn how code mode works and how to optimize your MCP tools with it.
**Sandboxes: how to limit agents so we can use them more - Patrick Dawkins (Principal Engineer, Upsun)**
We want our agents to run longer and use more tools, but we're hampered by constant prompts for approval. Sandboxes are the practical middle ground: isolate the agent so you can stop watching every command and let it work. This talk covers what "sandbox" means, who provides them today and the Linux primitives that let you build one yourself.
**Cooking with MCP in VS Code - Liam Hampton (Senior Cloud Advocate, Microsoft)**
In this session Liam will show you how VS Code is fully supporting the MCP spec, from MCP Apps to sandboxing and elicitations.
📅 **Date and Time:**
Thursday, May 14, from 6:00-9:00 PM
📍 **Location:**
Cloudflare
Address: 6th Floor, County Hall/The, Riverside Building, Belvedere Rd, London SE1 7PB, UK
👉 You can also register here: https://luma.com/eb8j6lhu
**⚡️ Interested in giving a talk? ⚡️**
Have you ever considered presenting on your Elastic use case? We welcome 5-10 minute lightning talks, 45-minute deep dives, and everything in between. If you're interested, please submit via our [CFP](https://sessionize.com/elastic-meetups/) or send us an email at [meetups@elastic.co.](http://meetups@elastic.co./)
Computer Science Events Near You
Connect with your local Computer Science community
Learn all things Data Science and Compete on Kaggle
We will be meeting at Starbucks to learn together. Come with an online class you're already going through or an interest and we will try to connect you with a course where you can learn it. Already have a skill you want to contribute to a Kaggle Datascience competition? We will work on these too! Laptop required :)
Ask the CMMC Experts
If **CMMC** is on your radar (or keeping you up at night), this is the conversation you don’t want to miss!
Join us on **Tuesday, May 12, 2026,** at **Honor Brewing Company** at **42604 Trade West Dr, Sterling, VA 20166**!
Want a custom name tag to enhance your networking opportunities? Register here and yours will be ready at the door:
https://share.hsforms.com/1YxovFyF9RzKCcq9EjAN8-wdwxz1
Join us for an “**Ask the CMMC Experts**” session with **Brian Gallagher and Carter Schoenberg of Koniag Cyber.** These two seasoned leaders have been deep in the trenches of cybersecurity, compliance, and national security!
**Brian** brings 20+ years of experience leading cybersecurity services across **highly regulated industries** and a unique perspective as a former **U.S. Secret Service Technical Security Division** professional who has helped secure some of the nation’s most sensitive environments.
**Carter** pairs 30+ years spanning cyber investigations, threat intelligence, and cyber law with hands-on CMMC leadership as a **Lead Certified Asessor**. He’s conducted 35+ independent CMMC assessments, supported 30+ Authorizations to Operate for **DHS and DoD**, and helped shape national conversations through work with **NIST, MITRE, and federal agencies.**
Bring your questions, your challenges, and your curiosity on **May 12**, for this candid, practical conversation with **Brian Gallagher and Carter Schoenberg**, designed to help you move forward with confidence!
**Agenda**
5:30 Social hour and networking begins
6:10 Welcome
6:15 Ask the CMMC Expert - **Brian Gallagher & Carter Schoenberg**
6:50 Q&A
7:00 Open Mic & Networking Continues
7:30 Adjourn
Amplifying Engineering Skills with Claude Code
**Title**: Amplifying Engineering Skills with Claude Code
In this session we will dive into how Claude Code can augment modern engineering practices, from rapid prototyping and refactoring to test generation and documentation. We’ll cover real-world use cases, integration patterns, and tips for getting the most out of AI in your development lifecycle.
6-6:30p.m. - food & drinks
6:30-7:30p.m. - Presentation
7:30-8:00p.m. - Q&A and Possible concept presentation for feedback
Build Intelligent Agents with Work IQ, Foundry IQ, Fabric IQ, and Copilot Studio
**Agenda :**
* 4.45 to 5.00 PM ET: Food and Networking
* 5.00 to 5.50 PM ET: "Build Intelligent Agents with Work IQ, Foundry IQ, Fabric IQ, and Copilot Studio"
Hello Everyone! Please join us for our May 12th edition of the AI-ML MeetUp. **Please note this is an in-person meeting and light refreshments/food will be provided. You will need a government-issued ID to enter the facility.**
**Title:** Build Intelligent Agents with Work IQ, Foundry IQ, Fabric IQ, and Copilot Studio
**Description:** What if your AI agents truly understood how your business works, had instant access to trusted enterprise data, and could take meaningful action from end to end?
In this session, we’ll cover how to build enterprise-ready AI agents that understand business context, use trusted data, and take real action. In this fast-paced session, we’ll bring Work IQ, Foundry IQ, and Fabric IQ together with Copilot Studio through best practices and live demos.
Key Takeaways:
\*Work IQ: Ground agents in real work, roles, and business processes
\*Foundry IQ: Design and orchestrate intelligent agent behavior
\*Fabric IQ: Power agents with secure, enterprise-grade data
\*Copilot Studio: Bring it all together into an end-to-end intelligent agent
**Location:** The meeting will be hosted in the Applied Information Sciences ( AIS ) office in Reston, at 11440 Commerce Park Dr # 600 · Reston, VA. The location is also right off the Silver Line metro's Wiehle-Reston Metro Station.
**Parking:** Parking is paid and can be validated at the AIS office reception.
We will meet in Room Lake Anne.
We hope to see you all there!!!!
Domain-Specific Small Language Models
Join us for a special session of our study group. Instead of continuing our coverage and discussion of the book "Domain-Specific Small Language Models", in this session, members of the group will present AI projects they have been working on, relating to the recent discussions of the group including the utilization of Large and Small Language Models.
Please find the agenda for our upcoming session below:
\- 7:00 \- 7:05: Introductions
\- 7:05 \- 7:20: Project 1: The Model Context Protocol \(MCP\) – Venky will discuss the protocol's functionality and demonstrate an MCP server he developed\.
\- 7:25 \- 7:40: Project 2: Page \- A Virginia Legislative Session Chatbot – Ron will describe a RAG system he developed\, covering various implementation approaches and lessons learned\.
\- 7:45 \- 8:00: Project 3: Menta \- A Small Language Model for Mental Health – Odysseas will present an SLM designed to assess mental health conditions using message text\.
\- 8:05 \- 8:20: Project 4: Open Brain – Richard will discuss an open\-source\, distributed\, personal AI solution based on an idea by Nate B\. Jones\.
\- 8:20 \- 8:30: Closing comments and conversation
Your Evals Are Bad: Evaluation and the Model Development Lifecycle
**REGISTER AT THE LUMA EVENT PAGE!!!**
https://luma.com/27ja5gwl
Join us for an exciting talk by Mary Gibbs, Senior Applied Scientist at Relativity.
**Agenda:**
6:00 - 6:30 PM - Welcome and mingle
6:30- 6:45 PM - Introductions
6:45 - 7:30 PM - Talk
7:30 - 8:00 PM - Wrap up
**Description:**
If you have ever shipped a model, watched your metrics improve, and later learned from your users that something was wrong, the metrics were always wrong. You just didn’t know it yet. An evaluation consists of three components, a benchmark, a scorer, and a claim about what a score represents. Each component has its own weaknesses. Benchmarks can suffer from narrow coverage, contamination, or saturation. Scorers are often chosen for ease of automation or computation rather than for their alignment with user outcomes. And the claim connecting a score to reality is rarely made explicit. These gaps compound across the model development lifecycle. When metrics improve, teams treat that as a signal and optimize directly against it, which is how a measurement problem becomes a model problem. This talk maps where evaluations can go wrong, considers counterarguments, and ends with practical advice for building better ones.
**Speaker Bio:**
Mary is a Senior Applied Scientist at Relativity, tackling data science challenges in the e-discovery and legal tech space. She is also an organizer for Women and Gender eXpansive Coders DC (formerly Women Who Code DC), fostering a community dedicated to empowering women and nonbinary individuals to excel in their careers. Mary's experience spans various domains. She has developed data science solutions related to job search and career progression at Teal, cybersecurity challenges at LiveAction Software, and commercial and government consulting at Mosaic Data Science. Before venturing into the field of data science, Mary conducted and published research pertaining to the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying neurodevelopment at the National Institutes of Health. In other words, she has dissected and imaged a lot of fruit fly brains. She holds a M.S. in Data Science from The George Washington University and a B.A. in Biological Sciences from Cornell University
Build Intelligent Agents with Work IQ, Foundry IQ, Fabric IQ, and Copilot Studio
**Agenda :**
* 4.45 to 5.00 PM ET: Food and Networking
* 5.00 to 5.50 PM ET: "Build Intelligent Agents with Work IQ, Foundry IQ, Fabric IQ, and Copilot Studio"
Hello Everyone! Please join us for our May 12th edition of the AI-ML MeetUp. **Please note this is an in-person meeting and light refreshments/food will be provided. You will need a government-issued ID to enter the facility.**
**Title:** Build Intelligent Agents with Work IQ, Foundry IQ, Fabric IQ, and Copilot Studio
**Description:** What if your AI agents truly understood how your business works, had instant access to trusted enterprise data, and could take meaningful action from end to end?
In this session, we’ll cover how to build enterprise-ready AI agents that understand business context, use trusted data, and take real action. In this fast-paced session, we’ll bring Work IQ, Foundry IQ, and Fabric IQ together with Copilot Studio through best practices and live demos.
Key Takeaways:
\*Work IQ: Ground agents in real work, roles, and business processes
\*Foundry IQ: Design and orchestrate intelligent agent behavior
\*Fabric IQ: Power agents with secure, enterprise-grade data
\*Copilot Studio: Bring it all together into an end-to-end intelligent agent
**Location:** The meeting will be hosted in the Applied Information Sciences ( AIS ) office in Reston, at 11440 Commerce Park Dr # 600 · Reston, VA. The location is also right off the Silver Line metro's Wiehle-Reston Metro Station.
**Parking:** Parking is paid and can be validated at the AIS office reception.
We will meet in Room Lake Anne.
We hope to see you all there!!!!






























