====Tensorflow on open lab machines==== Here are some notes for getting Tensorflow installed and running on the open lab machines. First of all, you can always just use my anaconda installation, which already has Tensorflow 0.10 installed. It can be found at ''/users/faculty/wingated/anaconda2'' In order to use it, you should be able to add the following line to your ''~/.bashrc'': ''export PATH="/users/faculty/wingated/anaconda2/bin:$PATH"'' If for whatever reason you would like your own anaconda installation, here are the exact steps I took to install it and Tensorflow: wget https://repo.continuum.io/archive/Anaconda2-4.1.1-Linux-x86_64.sh bash ./Anaconda2-4.1.1-Linux-x86_64.sh . ~/.bashrc export TF_BINARY_URL=https://storage.googleapis.com/tensorflow/linux/cpu/tensorflow-0.10.0-cp27-none-linux_x86_64.whl pip install --upgrade $TF_BINARY_URL pip install -I --upgrade setuptools pip install --upgrade $TF_BINARY_URL (When anaconda asks you if you want it to modify your ''.bashrc'', I answered yes. All it does is append that PATH modification line.) Note that this installs the CPU-only version. Note that no ''sudo'' commands are used -- that's because the ''pip'' commands I used were the anaconda ones. ---- Fellow lab mate Darin Costello reports that the following worked for him: given a working anaconda install, he used ''conda install -c conda-forge tensorflow''