September 2010
GMOD Meeting 13-14 September 2010 Cambridge, UK |
Part of GMOD Europe 2010 |
This GMOD community meeting was held 13-14 September 2010, in Cambridge, UK, as part of GMOD Europe 2010, which also included Satellite Meetings, an InterMine Workshop, and a BioMart Workshop. The meeting was sponsored and hosted by the Cambridge Computational Biology Institute at the University of Cambridge.
GMOD Meetings are a mix of user and developer presentations, and are a great place to find out what is happening in the project, what’s coming up, and what others are doing. The January 2010 GMOD Meeting was the previous event. The next meeting is likely to be held in spring 2011.
Professor Jason Swedlow
The Open Microscopy Environment: Open Informatics for Biological Imaging
The meeting’s guest speaker was Prof Jason Swedlow, who discussed his work with with the Open Microscopy Environment (OME), an open international consortium that develops and releases data specifications and management tools for biological imaging. OME metadata enables image sharing, analysis, and integration with other data types.
Dr Swedlow is a Professor at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Gene Regulation and Expression and the University of Dundee. Jason’s research focuses on mechanisms and regulation of chromosome segregation during mitotic cell division.
Time | Topic | Presenter(s) | Links |
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09:15 | Introductions | Scott Cain | |
10:00 | The State of GMOD | Scott Cain | <a href=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/GMOD/gmod.github.io/main/mediawiki/images/7/78/TheStateofGMODSept2010.pdf” |
class=”internal” title=”TheStateofGMODSept2010.pdf”>PDF</a>, Summary | |||
10:30 | Break | ||
11:00 | Help Desk Update | Dave Clements | <a href=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/GMOD/gmod.github.io/main/mediawiki/images/b/bf/HelpDeskSept2010.pdf” class=”internal” |
title=”HelpDeskSept2010.pdf”>PDF</a>, PPT, Summary | | 11:30 | Keynote: The Open Microscopy Environment: Open Informatics for Biological Imaging | Jason Swedlow | Summary | | 12:30 | Catered Lunch | | | | 13:45 | PSICQUIC: The PSI Common QUery Interface | Bruno Aranda | PDF, Summary | | 14:15 | MolGenIS and XGAP | Morris Swertz | PDF, Summary | | 14:45 | The GMOD Chado Natural Diversity Module | Bob MacCallum | PDF, PPT, gdoc, Summary | | 15:15 | Break | | | | 15:45 | Cosmic GBrowse: Visualising cancer mutations in genomic context | David Beare | PDF, PPT, Summary | | 16:15 | GMOD Projects at the Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics | Chris Hemmerich | PDF, PPT, Summary |
Time | Topic | Presenter(s) | Links |
---|---|---|---|
09:15 | GMOD RPC API: The almost RESTful GMOD API | Josh Goodman | <a href=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/GMOD/gmod.github.io/main/mediawiki/images/e/ee/GMOD_RPC_Sept_2010.pdf” |
class=”internal” title=”GMOD RPC Sept 2010.pdf”>PDF</a>, Summary | |||
09:45 | Overview of current resources and update on DAS Meeting Cambridge 2010 | Jonathan Warren | <a href=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/GMOD/gmod.github.io/main/mediawiki/images/e/e6/DAS_Sept2010.pdf” class=”internal” |
title=”DAS Sept2010.pdf”>PDF</a>, PPT, Summary | | 10:15 | InterMine: new Mines and new features | Richard Smith | PDF, Summary | | 10:40 | Break | | | | 11:00 | Literature Curation in GMOD | Daniel Renfro | PDF, PPT, Summary | | 11:30 | Towards a GO Annotation Tool: Curation Accelerator Software | Helen Field | PDF, KEY, Summary | | 12:00 | BioPivot: Applying Microsoft Live Labs Pivot to Problems in Bioinformatics | Steve Taylor | PDF, PPT, Summary | | 12:30 | Catered Lunch | | | | 13:45 | CRAWL (Chado RESTful Access Web-service Layer) | Giles Verlarde | PDF, Summary | | 14:15 | Lessons the GMOD community can glean from the Apache Software Foundation | | Summary | | 14:45 | Lightning talks | | Summary | | | GBrowse 2 and JBrowse Features | Scott Cain | Summary | | | CpG Island and STR Annotator Plugins | Joan Pontius | Summary | | | GMOD Sustainability and Organization | Dave Clements | Summary | | 15:15 | Break | | |
GMOD Europe 2010 continued after the GMOD meeting, starting with the Satellite Meetings (topics were Post Reference Genome Tools and Community Annotation) and the InterMine Workshop, and finishing with the BioMart Workshop. See GMOD Europe 2010 for a complete schedule.
Presentations spanned two days and covered a wide variety of topics.
The talks can be roughly categorized:
GMOD is:
These two things are equally important.
GMOD is used by
Note: The next meeting is the March 2011 GMOD Meeting being held at NESCent, in Durham, North Carolina, United States, as part of GMOD Americas 2011.
GMOD Mailing Lists are all over. Many are hosted at SourceForge, but several are elsewhere (EBI, Bluehost, Berkeley, …). Some don’t have public archives and those that do are spread around The lists at SourceForge have searchable archives but the search interface is frustrating.
Since May/June 2010, all emails to GMOD mailing lists have been archived in a single searchable hierarchy at Nabble. Nabble has a functional search capability and you can now search all lists, or just a single list.
GMOD’s requirements for software to join GMOD were codified in February 2010, following the January 2010 GMOD Meeting. These requirements were in use before February, but were inconsistently applied.
Version 1 Requirements:
For next version, want to add:
Discussion favored these additions. The issue of incompatible open source licenses also came up. GMOD currently requires any OSI approved license. However, some of those licenses are not compatible with each other, meaning they such components can’t be bundled together.
Help spread the word about GMOD components and the GMOD project.
Why?
How?
The GMOD Promotion page launched in July 2010.
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Nine projects got new logos in the Spring 2010 Logo Program. Logos were done by John Aikman’s Spring 2010 Advanced Design class at Linn-Benton Community College, Albany, Oregon, United States. Each project worked with 2-3 students during the quarter to produce the selected logos.
We might do this again in 2011.
The 2008 GMOD Community Survey covered components and project wide topics. The 2009 GMOD Community Survey focused on genome and comparative genomics browsing. The 2010 GMOD Community Survey will cover components and project wide topics. We may use it to produce a GMOD Project publication.
These surveys help guide the project and also show potential and current GMOD users what the larger community is doing.
Look for the 2010 survey in October.
The satellites at the January 2010 GMOD Meeting were such a success that we decided to do them again. Satellites are birds of a feather discussions where participants with a common interest discuss that topic. The satellites at this meeting were:
See the satellite meeting pages for summaries of the discussion.
In 2010 we held our 4th summer school in May at NESCent, in Durham, North Carolina, US. We had 62 applicants for 25 slots.
The 2011 course will likely be at NESCent again. However, starting in 2011, summer school expenses will no longer be covered by a grant (see below). This means that we will start charging tuition, and that we will also start seeking sponsors.
Summer school sessions become online tutorials that include starting and ending VMware images, step by step instructions, and example datasets.
Other Upcoming Events of Note