I'd like to thank the PyTables community that have collaborated in the exhaustive testing of Blosc. With an aggregate amount of more than 300 TB of different datasets compressed *and* decompressed successfully, I can say that Blosc is pretty safe now and ready for production purposes. Other important contributions: * Valentin Haenel did a terrific work implementing the support for the Snappy compression, fixing typos and improving docs and the plotting script. * Thibault North, with ideas from Oscar Villellas, contributed a way to call Blosc from different threads in a safe way. Christopher Speller introduced contexts so that a global lock is not necessary anymore. * The CMake support was initially contributed by Thibault North, and Antonio Valentino and Mark Wiebe made great enhancements to it. * Christopher Speller also introduced the two new '_ctx' calls to avoid the use of the blosc_init() and blosc_destroy(). * Jack Pappas contributed important portability enhancements, specially runtime and cross-platform detection of SSE2/AVX2 as well as high precision timers (HPET) for the benchmark program. * @littlezhou implemented the AVX2 version of shuffle routines. * Julian Taylor contributed a way to detect AVX2 in runtime and calling the appropriate routines only if the undelying hardware supports it. * Kiyo Masui for relicensing his bitshuffle project for allowing the inclusion of part of his code in Blosc.