----------------------------------------------------------------------
Common Questions and Answers about ACEDB.
This document will be posted monthly to the BIOSCI newsgroup
bionet.software.acedb and to USENET conference news.answers.
It is intended to be used as an index to ACEDB databases and
to information about the database software.
The latest version of the ACEDB FAQ should be available via
anonymous ftp at machine net.bio.net (134.172.2.69) as
file pub/BIOSCI/ACEDB/ACEDB.FAQ or at rtfm.mit.edu
(18.70.0.209) as pub/usenet.news.answers/acedb-faq. Answer 3
demonstrates a sample FTP session. If you only have
electronic mail, the FAQ can be retrieved from
mail-server at rtfm.mit.edu.
There is an HyperText Markup Language (HTML) version of this
document available on the World Wide Web:
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/plant/acedbfaq.html
[Until I get more familiar with HTML, it may not be totally
synchronized with the plain FAQ. --bks]
Curators of ACEDB databases should take note of Question 4 and
keep me apprised of changes.
Errors of commission or omission are unintentional. If I have
forgotten to give you credit please let me know. Please
send comments and corrections to: acedbfaq at s27w007.pswfs.gov
--Bradley K. Sherman
----------------------------------------------------------------------
The List of questions in the ACEDB FAQ. Questions marked with
+ are new, those with ! have substantially changed answers:
Q0: What is ACEDB?
Q1: What is the current version of ACEDB?
Q2: !What hardware|software do I need to run ACEDB?
Q3: Where can I get ACEDB?
Q4: !What ACEDB databases exist?
Q5: What written documentation exists for ACEDB?
Q6: Where can I find further information about ACEDB?
Q7: How should ACEDB be cited?
Q8: Is ACEDB object-oriented?
Q9: What's all this about Gopher|WAIS|Anonymous ftp|WWW|URL ...
Q10: How can I get on the ACEDB announcements mailing list?
Q11: When and where is the next ACEDB Workshop?
Q411:Who contributed to this document?
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q0: What is ACEDB?
A0: ACEDB is an acronym for A Caenorhabditis elegans Database. It can
refer to a database and data concerning the nematode C. elegans,
or to the database software alone. This document is concerned
primarily with the latter meaning. ACEDB is being adapted by many
groups to organize molecular biology data about the genomes of
diverse species [see Q4].
ACEDB allows for automatic cross-referencing of items during
loading and allows for hypertextual navigation of the links
using a graphical user interface and mouse. Certain special
purpose graphical displays have been integrated into the
software. These reflect the needs of molecular biologists
in constructing genetic and physical maps of genomes.
ACEDB was written and developed by Richard Durbin (MRC LMB
Cambridge, England) and Jean Thierry-Mieg (CNRS, Montpellier,
France), beginning circa 1990. It is written in the C programming
language and uses the X11 windowing system to provide a platform
independent graphical user interface. The source code is publicly
available [See Q3]. Durbin & Thierry-Mieg continue to develop
the system, with contributions from other groups including
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and the European integrated Genome
Project.
A description by Durbin & Thierry-Mieg:
ACEDB does not use an underlying relational database
schema, but a system we wrote ourselves in which data
are stored in objects that belong in classes. This is
nevertheless a general database management system using
caches, session control, and a powerful query language.
Typical objects are clones, genes, alleles, papers,
sequences, etc. Each object is stored as a tree,
following a hierarchical structure for the class (called
the "model"). Maps are derived from data stored in tree
objects, but precomputed and stored as tables for
efficiency. The system of models allows flexibility
and efficiency of storage -missing data are not stored.
A major advantage is that the models can be extended
and refined without invalidating an existing database.
Comments can be added to any node of an object.
Current display modes are:
TREE for text type objects: papers, authors, genes
etc.
GMAP genetic map
PMAP physical map (Sulston contig style)
SEQ DNA sequence - symbolic, features, sequence
and translation
GRID hybridisation patterns for a probe to a clone
grid
BIBLIO bibliography attached to any object display
modules under development:
CMAP whole chromosome physical map plot
GEL agarose gel simulation derived from sequence
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q1: What is the current version of ACEDB?
A1: As of January 1994, ACEDB has undergone a bifurcation. Those
involved with C. elegans will want to to track the 2.x series
under the stewardship of Richard Durbin and all other groups
should probably track the 3.x series of Jean Thierry-Mieg.
Thierry-Mieg writes "... 2 and 3 differ only at the level of
displays ..." Version 2.0 was released in December, 1993 and
version 3.0 was released in January, 1994.
To retrieve the software see Q3.
To be kept informed of new releases see Q10.
[This question refers to the software not the C. elegans data.]
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q2: What hardware/software do I need to run ACEDB?
A2: ACEDB currently runs on the following Unix systems, under X11:
Unix:
o Any machine running SunOS 4.x
o SPARCstation 10 under Solaris [Probably all Solaris, then --bks]
o DEC DECstation3100, 5100 etc.
o DEC Alpha/OSF-1
o Silicon Graphics Iris series
o PC 386/486 with Linux (free Unix)
o There exist, or have existed, ports onto Alliant, Hewlett-
Packard, IBM R6000, Convex. You may have to contact
the developer responsible for the port to make these real.
o NeXT: contact Patrick Phillips at University of Texas,
NeXTmail: patrick at wbar.uta.eduphil at decster.uta.edu
MSDOS/Windows/NT:
A port to NT is rumored to be in the works.
Macintosh:
A port to the Macintosh may become available real soon now.
Beta versions of this *might* be found at the ACE archives.
See Q3. Here is a note from Richard Durbin:
There is now a tested Macintosh version.
You need a Macintosh with >16Mb of memory
and a decent monitor. You also need some
way of obtaining the files from an ftp site
(e.g. NCSA telnet, Versaterm Pro...) and
Stuffit Deluxe, which I am told costs $65
in the USA, and is useful anyway for
compressing/decompressing files. It turns
out >that Stuffit Deluxe can decompress Unix
.tar.Z archive files. Frank Eeckman has now
made available a .tar.Z archive of a complete
C. elegans ACEDB database, with updates already
read in. Ftp to genome.lbl.gov, folder
pub/macace, and follow the instructions in
README. Thank you Frank.
For cost savings, a combination of a high-end Intel platform
with Linux appears very attractive.
Here at the Institute of Forest Genetics we run ACEDB on a
Sun Microsystems SPARCstation II, and users can interact
using Macintoshes and PC-clones by using X11 implementations
for the personal computers and a LAN. [This section should
be expanded to have a more thorough discussion of X11
interactions. --bks]
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q3: Where can I get ACEDB?
A3: All the files are available in the following public access
accounts (anonymous ftp sites) accessible via Internet:
lirmm.lirmm.fr (193.49.104.10) in pub/acedb
cele.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk (131.111.84.1) in pub/acedb
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (130.14.20.1) in repository/acedb
bioinformatics.weizmann.ac.il (132.76.55.12) in
pub/databases/acedb.
A typical session would be:
ftp ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
login: anonymous
password: your email address
cd repository/acedb/ace3
binary
ls
get README_3
get NOTES
get INSTALL
get bin.sparc.3.0.tar.Z
quit
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q4: What ACEDB databases exist?
A4: [In alphabetic order by Database name --bks]
Database : AAnDB-1.0
Species : Aspergillus nidulans
PI : Leland Ellis
Last_update : February 1994
ACEDB_version : 3.0
Contact : leland at stralight.tamu.edu
URL : http://keck.tamu.edu/ibt.html
Comment : defunct, See AGsDB
Database : AAtDB
Species : Arabidopsis thaliana
Availability :
Curator : John Morris
Current version: 1-5
Contact : curator at frodo.mgh.harvard.edu
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : ABtDB-1.0
Species : Bovine, Bos taurus
ACEDB_version : 3.0 extended
PI : Leland Ellis
Last_update : February 1994
Contact : leland at stralight.tamu.edu
URL : http://keck.tamu.edu/ibt.html
Comment : defunct, See AGsDB
Database : ACeDB
Species : Caenorhabditis elegans
Current version: 2-9
Curator : Jean Thierry-Mieg
Curator : Richard Durbin
Contact : rd at mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk
Contact : mieg at kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr
Last_update : March 1994
Database : AceMap
Species : Homo Sapiens (Saccaromyces Pombe, Mus musculus in development)
Focus : Physical mapping of human chromosomes X and 21
Curator : Hugues Roest Crollius
Contact : hrc at gea.lif.icnet.uk
PI : Hans Lehrach
PI : Hugues Roest Crollius
Last_update : 22 Feb 1994
Database : AGhDB
Species : Gossipium hirsutum (cotton)
PI : Leland Ellis
Curator : Stephanie Crouch
Last_update : March 1994
Contact : leland at stralight.tamu.edu
URL : http://keck.tamu.edu/ibt.html
Database : AGsDB A Genus species Database
Species : Aspergillus nidulans
Species : Neurospora crassa
Species : cow w/ human anchor loci
Species : cotton (demo)
Species : Homologs of Aspergillus cell cycle loci
for budding and fission yeast
Contact : Leland Ellis (leland at straylight.tamu.edu)
Based_on : ACeDB-3.0 (beta still), with extensions to the Human
C21 Models to provide for multiple species, and queries
between species via Homologs (e.g., cell cycle loci with
links via Homologs between Aspergillus and budding
C. cerevisiae) and fission (S. pombe) yeast);
interacting loci via defined Interactions for each locus
Models : as of 3.6.94
Data : as of 3.6.94
Revision : AAnDB for Aspergillus nidulans and ABtDB forBos taurus
(cow) have been folded into AGsDB, and are not being
developed futher as individual species databases
WWW : WWW-AGsDB is an interface of AGsDB with the World-Wide Web,
and utilizes the WWW-ACeDB Server (nph-acedb3) of Guy Ducoux
(ducoux at moulon.inra.fr).
URL : http://keck.tamu.edu/ibt.html
Database : ASbDB
Species : Sorghum bicolor
PI : Leland Ellis
Curator : Stephanie Crouch
Last_update : March 1994
Contact : leland at stralight.tamu.edu
URL : http://keck.tamu.edu/ibt.html
Database : ChlamyDB
Species : Chlamydomonas
PI : Elizabeth Harris
Contact : chlamy at acpub.duke.edu
Availability : Still under construction
Last_update : 30 Sept. 1993
Database : EcoDB
Species : E. coli
PI : Staffan Bergh
Contact : staffan at biochem.kth.se
Availability : Still under construction
Last_update : 11 Oct. 1993
Database : FlyBase
Species : Drosophila melanogaster
Availability : gopher or gopher+ ftp.bio.indiana.edu
Availability : ACeDB-style interface to SyBase server
due by end of 1994
Curator : Edward Welbourne
Contact : eddy at gen.cam.ac.uk
Contact : flybase at morgan.harvard.edu
PI : William Gelbart
PI : Michael Ashburner
PI : Thomas Kaufman
PI : Kathy Matthews
PI : John Merriam
Database : Flydb
Species : Drosophila melanogaster
Availability : by request only, via ftp
Curator : Suzanna E. Lewis
Contact : SELewis at lbl.gov
Focus : STS content mapping project summary
PI : Gerald Rubin
PI : Mike Palazzolo
PI : Dan Hartl
PI : Alan Spradling
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : GrainGenes
Species : Wheat, barley, oats, relatives
Availability : Gopher greengenes.cit.cornell.edu port 70
Availability : ACEDB version by ftp, on request from the curators
Curator : David E. Matthews
PI : Olin D. Anderson
Contact : matthews at greengenes.cit.cornell.edu
Contact : oandersn at wheat.usda.gov
URL : gopher://greengenes.cit.cornell.edu/1/
Data_version : 1.3
Released : 12 Jan 1994
Based_on : acedb.1-10
Availability : See following WWW URL
URL : http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/acedbs/acedbs/graingenes/index.html
Last_update : Feb. 1994
Database : human.c17
Species : Homo sapiens
Availability : the database is under development
Contact : lsprilus at weizmann.weizmann.ac.il
Focus : mapping & sequencing of Human Chromosome 17
Based_on: acedb.3-0
Last_update : Jan. 1994
Database : Mace
Species : Zea mays L. ssp. mays
Focus : Maize genome
Comment : Mace is the front end for maizedb, a relational
(SYBASE) database. It is updated from maizedb by
software written by Stan Letovsky. Maizedb is
updated daily and will soon be accessible by
public login.
Curator : Ed Coe
Curator : Pat Byrne
Curator : Georgia Davis
Curator : Mary Polacco
Off-Site Curator : Marty Sachs
Off-Site Curator : Christiane Fauron
Off-Site Curator : Carolyn Wetzel
Off-Site Curator : Steve Rodermel
Off-Site Curator/Designer : Stan Letovsky
Off-Site Curator/Designer : Mary Berlyn
Systems Manager : Denis Hancock
PI : Ed Coe
Contact : maizedb at teosinte.agron.missouri.edu
Last_update: 5 October 1993
Database : MycDB
Species : Mycobacterium
PI : Staffan Bergh
PI : Thierry Garnier
Contact : staffan at pasteur.fr
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : RiceGenes
Species : Rice (O. sative)
Availability : under development, login at own risk
Curator : Edie Paul
Contact : epaul at nightshade.cit.cornell.edu
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : SolGenes
Coverage: Solanaceae - tomato, potato, pepper (eventually)
Availability : Beta ACEDB via login or tar file
Curator : Edie Paul
Contact : epaul at nightshade.cit.cornell.edu
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : SoyBase
Species : Soybeans
Curator : Lisa Lorenzen
PI : Randy Shoemaker
Contact : lorenzen at mendel.agron.iastate.edu
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : TreeGenes
Species : Forest trees
Availability : alpha, contact curator
ACEDB_version : 1-10
Curator : Bradley K. Sherman
PI : David B. Neale
Contact : Dendrome at s27w007.pswfs.gov
Contact : bks at s27w007.pswfs.gov
Contact : dbn at s27w007.pswfs.gov
Last_update : March 1994
URL : gopher://s27w007.pswfs.gov/
URL : http://s27w007.pswfs.gov/
URL : ftp://probe.nalusda.gov/pub/trees
Database : 21Bdb
Species : Homo sapiens
Availability : by request, via ftp, gopher
Curator : Donn F. Davy
Contact : DFDavy at lbl.gov
Contact : aggarwal at genome.lbl.gov
Focus : STS content mapping & sequencing of Human Chromosome 21
PI : Jasper Rine
PI : Michael Palazzolo
PI : Chris Martin
PI : Jan-Fang Cheng
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : VoxPop
Species : Populus spp.
Availability : contact curator
Curator : Carl G. Riches
PI : Reinhard F. Stettler
Contact : cgr at poplar1.cfr.washington.edu
Contact : STETTLER at coyote.cfr.washington.edu
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : ?
Species : Sorghum
PI : Leland Ellis
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : ?
PI : Scott Chasalow
Species : Potato
Contact : Scottish Crop Institute, Dundee
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : ?
PI : George Murphy
PI : David Flanders
Species : Arabidopsis thaliana
Contact : John Innes Center, Norwich, England
Last_update : Sept. 1993
Database : ?
Species : Homo sapiens
Focus : Physical mapping of human chromosomes 22 and X
Curator : Ian Dunham
Contact : idunham at crc.ac.ukid1 at sanger.ac.uk
PI : Ian Dunham
PI : David Bentley
Last_update : 28 Sep 1993
[Curators: Please submit an entire paragraph in
this format for inclusion or update. --bks]
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q5: What written documentation exists for ACEDB?
A5: The primary documents are included in the Software
distribution in the wdoc subdirectory:
acedb -- A C. elegans Database: I. Users' Guide.
acedb -- A C. elegans Database: II. Installation Guide.
acedb -- A C. elegans Database: III. Configuration Guide.
Syntactic Definitions for the ACEDB Data Base Manager
--Jean Thierry-Mieg and Richard Durbin (1991-)
You will find other interesting documents in the wdoc subdirectory.
By anonymous ftp from ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (130.14.20.1)
in repository/acedb:
doc.1_9.tar.Z
Cherry, J.M., Cartinhour, S.W., and Goodman, H.M. (1992) AAtDB,
An Arabidopsis thaliana Database. Plant Molecular Biology Reporter
10 (4): 308-309,409-410
Tutorial manual for AAtDB:
Cartinhour, S., Cherry, J.M., and Goodman, H.M. (1992) An
Introduction to ACeDB: For AAtDB, An Arabidopsis thaliana
Database. Massachusetts General Hospital. (Available on
request in printed form from the AAtDB curator).
A description of ACEDB:
Cherry, J.M. and Cartinhour, S.W. (1993) ACEDB, A tool for
biological information. in Automated DNA Sequencing and
Analysis, edited by M. Adams, C. Fields, and C. Venter.
Academic Press (in press). [text is available through
ftp or gopher from weeds.mgh.harvard.edu]
Another description of ACEDB for physical mapping projects:
Dunham, I., Durbin, R., Mieg, J-T & Bentley, D.R. (1993)
Physical mapping projects and ACEDB, in Guide to Human
Genome Computing. Ed. Bishop, M.J. (Academic Press)
(review, in press). [text is available through ftp or
gopher from weeds.mgh.harvard.edu]
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q6: Where can I find further information about ACEDB?
A6: There is a Usenet/Biosci conference titled bionet.software.acedb.
If you do not have access to the Biosci conferences via a
newsreader (e.g. rn, trn) you can participate in the conference
by electronic mail. To subscribe to the e-mail version of the
conference send email to biosci-server at net.bio.net (UK, European
readers use biosci at uk.ac.daresbury or biosci.daresbury.ac.uk) with
no subject line and only the message
subscribe ACEDB-SOFT
in the body. To unsubscribe send the message
unsubscribe ACEDB-SOFT
to the same address.
This is an automated service. Your e-mail address will be taken
from the header of the message that you send. If you then send
mail to acedb at net.bio.net the mail will be distributed to all
subscribers and to the electronic conference.
Mike Cherry has set up an ACEDB Developer's archive. For
anonymous ftp use the hostname weeds.mgh.harvard.edu and look in
the acedb_dev directory. If you wish to contribute you can put
files in the incoming directory. Send a message to Mike
(cherry at genome.stanford.edu) that you have put something in that
directory then Mike will move it out for general access.
For gopher you can connect to weeds.mgh.harvard.edu
(132.183.190.21) and ...
--> N. FTP Archives for Molecular Biology/
then
--> M. ACEDB Developer's archive/
[N and M are integers which are subject to change.]
The bionet.software. acedb.conference is archived and can be
searched using WAIS. Here is a Gopher-style link to the WAIS
archive. (This is also courtesy of Mike Cherry.):
#
Type=7
Name=ACEDB BioSci Electronic Conference
Path=7/.index/acedb-biosci
Host=genome-gopher.stanford.edu
Port=70
The AAtDB, Soybase, GrainGenes, Mace, and TreeGenes (see Q4)
databases regularly submit data to the Plant Genome Database
at the National Agricultural Library (NAL). Nal makes this
data available via the WWW using an http server with URL:
http://probe.nalusda.gov:8000/index.html
You will also find a selection of models.wrm files (schemata)
for the various databases here. You will want to get a
"mosaic client" to examine this.
Other URL's that readers with mosaic clients might want to
examine are:
http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb/acedb.html for C. elegans data
http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb/mycdb.html for Mycobacterium data
http://moulon.inra.fr:8001/acedb/igd.html for an integrated
genome database.
For information on how these were created see
http://moulon.inra.fr/acedb_conf_eng.htmlhttp://moulon.inra.fr/acedb_conf.html (en francais)
The Genome Computing Group, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
has an anonymous ftp service at machine genome.lbl.gov
(131.243.224.80) which contains:
flydb - LBL's Drosophila Acedb-style database
21bdb - LBL's Human Chromosome 21 Acedb-style database
querdb - LBL's query-language extensions to Acedb
metadata - LBL's compendium of Acedb database schema variants
macace-aatdb-demo.hqx - pre-release Acedb MacIntosh version
There is also a repository of contributed software for
data conversions and the like.
Computer staff for the UC Berkeley Drosophila physical mapping
project the LBL Human Chromosome 21 project, and the LBL plant
genome projects meet regularly to coordinate their ACEDB
extension and development efforts, along with Frank Eeckman,
who is working on the Macintosh version of ACEDB (for further
information, contact jlmccarthy at lbl.gov). They also keep in
close touch (via email, personal visits, etc.) with their
counterparts in Cambridge (Richard Durbin et al), Montpellier
Jean Thierry-Mieg et al), and the Interated Genome Database
project in Heidelburg (Otto Ritter, Detlef Wolf et al).
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q7: How should ACEDB be cited?
A7: From the distribution:
We realize that we have not yet published any "real" paper on
ACEDB. We consider however that anonymous ftp servers are a
form of publication. We would appreciate if users of ACEDB
could quote:
Richard Durbin and Jean Thierry Mieg (1991-). A C. elegans
Database. Documentation, code and data available from
anonymous FTP servers at lirmm.lirmm.fr,
cele.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk and ncbi.nlm.nih.gov.
Papers involved in database development could quote more
precisely:
I. Users' Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB distribution
kit,
II. Installation Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB
distribution
III. Configuration Guide. Included as part of the ACEDB
distribution
and the preprintkit, available by Anonymous FTP from ...
Jean Thierry-Mieg and Richard Durbin (1992). Syntactic
Definitions for the ACEDB Data Base Manager. Included as
part of the ACEDB distribution.
--Jean and Richard.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q8: Is ACEDB object-oriented?
A8: From the ACEDB User's Guide.
A major current vogue in computer languages and database design
is for ``object-oriented'' systems. It's also a source of lots
of argument. We are just trying to build a good system, and
don't want to get caught in the crossfire, but we do talk about
organising our data into objects and classes. We have undoubtedly
been influenced by many of the ideas going around, but it isn't
likely our system would be regarded as kosher by the object-
oriented community. In particular there is no class hierarchy, nor
inheritance, and it is written in a modular but non-ideological way
in straight C. However display and disk storage methods are class
dependent.
In some ways the class hierarchy is replaced by our system of
models and trees, which seems to be rather unusual. We think it
is very natural for the representation of biological information,
where for some members of a class a lot might be known about some
aspect, but for most only a little is known.
The advantages of our sytem over a relational database, such as
Oracle or Sybase, is our ability to refine our descriptions without
rebuilding the database and the possibility of organising the
storage of data on disk according to their class, i.e. we store in
a very different way the tree-objects and the long stretches of
DNA sequence.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q9: What's all this about Gopher/WAIS/Anonymous ftp/WWW ...
A9: These terms all refer to Internet protocols.
An excellent introduction to the Internet is:
_The Whole Internet User's Guide & Catalog_,
by Ed Krol, O'Reilly & Associates, 1992.
Or ask your system administrator to provide you with
a gopher client or mosaic client and begin navigating
on your own.
URL is a Universal Resource Locator on the World-Wide
Web (WWW). There are many free Internet browsers
available that allow you to use an Internet connection
and a URL to access services. Mosaic may be the
most popular and it is available for Mac, PC or Unix
via anonymous ftp from ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q10: How can I get on the ACEDB announcements mailing list?
A10: To get on or off the mailing list send mail to
rd at mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk or mieg at kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr.
New releases of the software are announced to
this list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Q11: When and where is the Next ACEDB Workshop?
Q11: From Jean Thierry-Mieg:
DATES:
The acedb '94 workshop will be held july 2 to 16, in Saint Matthieu
de Treviers, a small village, 20 km north of Montpellier, at the
foot of the Pic Saint Loup.
HOUSING:
We have booked a place meant for family vacations which includes
ample space, a nice conference room and ten studios meant for 5
people (bathroom, shower, kitchenette, terrace, all nice and clean)
that we plan to share among 3 to 4 participants. Meals will be
taken at a local restaurant.
The place is ideal for work and informal discussions and will be
well equiped with computers. The situation is nice for hiking and
allows volley-ball, ping-pong, tennis and petanque.
We can provide lists of possible hotels for those who would prefer
more privacy or find ways of accomodating families if you let us
know very soon (school ends early july in France).
Cost for 2 weeks is 1000 FF (about 200 US dollars) for housing on
site plus 2500 FF for full meals. We may get enough funding to
reduce this cost, but cannot pay for travel.
PROGRAM:
Formal presentations and general discussions will take place in the
mornings and the evenings, alternating network aspects, data handling,
displays and genome data analaysis.
The afternoons will be dedicated to data manipulation, programming
and writing documentation. The idea is to actually implement during
the meeting many of the ideas that will come up, to fuse and
coallesce the now numerous acedb-based applications into a working
modular package, and to import and consolidate large sets of
additional data.
Towards this goal, we will broadcast the following announcement
ACEDB'94 Genome Database Workshop.
Montpellier, July 2-16, 1994
This meeting will cover the use and development of the
ACEDB database manager central to several major genome projects,
including C.elegans, A.thaliana, human, and a number of
other plant and animal species.
We wish to encourage people with large sets of data on other
organisms to attend this workshop. They will be helped to build,
during the meeting, a friendly graphic presentation of their own
data, in return for discussing their own experience.
*******************************************************************
FORMAT:
This meeting will be much longer than the 2 previous acedb workshops
(Cambridge 92 and Boston 93), in the hope of initiating new
collaborations and allowing concrete results. This format is usual in
physics summer schools and often very productive.
The workshop may be coupled to a 2 days presentation of acedb, open
to the general audience, and yet to be organised.
We anticipate at least the participation of people from: Berkeley,
Boston, Cambridge, Heidelberg and Montpellier, including Richard
Durbin (LMB and Sanger Centre, Cambridge), John McCarthy (LBL,
Berkeley), Otto Ritter (DKFZ, Heidelberg), Danielle and Jean
Thierry-Mieg (CNRS, Montpellier).
Please confirm your participation and forward this announcement to
your colleagues.
Danielle and Jean Thierry-Mieg
CNRS-CRBM
BP 5051,
34033 Montpellier, France.
email mieg at kaa.crbm.cnrs-mop.fr
(if this address fails, fall back on mieg at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Tel: (33) 67 61 33 24
Fax: (33) 67 52 15 59
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Q411:Who contributed to this document?
[Note to international readers: 411 is the phone number for
information in the USA. --bks]
A411: Major contributions in getting this FAQ off the ground
were made by John McCarthy and Mike Cherry. Other
contributors include:
Lisa Lorenzen
David Matthews
Edie Paul
Donn Davy
Eric De Mund
Sam Cartinhour
To add or modify information in this document, please
send mail to: acedbfaq at s27w007.pswfs.gov
Bradley K. Sherman
Dendrome Project
Institute of Forest Genetics
P.O. Box 245, Berkeley, CA, 94701
Phone: 510-559-6437 Fax: 510-559-6440
The Dendrome Project and TreeGenes are funded by the
Office of the Plant Genome, USDA ARS.
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