Difference between revisions of "7th Discussion-5 October 2009"

From BioWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (Reverted edits by Sexton (Talk); changed back to last version by 91.214.47.168)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
http://bbtramadol.webgarden.com/ tramadol online
+
=Transcript of Minutes=
 +
'''coming soon'''
 +
 
 +
= Brief Description and Continuing Discussion (please edit in line): =
 +
 +
== Chip-Seq analysis tools and methods (led by David Sexton)==
 +
 
 +
Chip-Seq is an active and growing area for bioinformatics core facilities.  This 35-40 minute discussion will address and solicit from the participants: What types of experiments are being run? What applications (RNAseq, bisulfide-seq, medip) are prevalent? What tools/software has been utilized and which ones are found to be of value for a core facility--in peak finding, comparisons, etc?
 +
 
 +
== Desktop sequence analysis software (Led by Simon Andrews) ==
 +
 
 +
This ever-present necessity does not diminish for the day-to-day sequence analysis needs of a lab. This 15 minute discussion will ask the questions: what are labs and cores using for creation of primers, vectors, restriction maps?  In a market environment where vendor-supported products are continually in flux--VectorNTI, CLCBio--what options are available in the custom-built, academic environment or in stable vendor-supported options?

Latest revision as of 12:08, 14 December 2009

Transcript of Minutes

coming soon

Brief Description and Continuing Discussion (please edit in line):

Chip-Seq analysis tools and methods (led by David Sexton)

Chip-Seq is an active and growing area for bioinformatics core facilities. This 35-40 minute discussion will address and solicit from the participants: What types of experiments are being run? What applications (RNAseq, bisulfide-seq, medip) are prevalent? What tools/software has been utilized and which ones are found to be of value for a core facility--in peak finding, comparisons, etc?

Desktop sequence analysis software (Led by Simon Andrews)

This ever-present necessity does not diminish for the day-to-day sequence analysis needs of a lab. This 15 minute discussion will ask the questions: what are labs and cores using for creation of primers, vectors, restriction maps? In a market environment where vendor-supported products are continually in flux--VectorNTI, CLCBio--what options are available in the custom-built, academic environment or in stable vendor-supported options?