Hello,
First, let me share the photos that I have taken in Toyama last year:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/25919479@N05/sets/72157632032676595/
Second:
On 2013-05-04, at 5:25 PM, Toshiaki Katayama <
kt...@dbcls.jp> wrote:
> As far as I'm aware of, two other submissions are in preparation,
> one is almost complete and the other will be finished by the end of May hopefully.
We (Geraint, Jin-Dong, Kevin, Michel and me) are currently scrambling to get a short BioInterchange manuscript ready. I think we need until the end of the month to wrap up the writing though.
I have updated the BioInterchange web site and the documentation is almost complete now:
http://www.biointerchange.org (minor glitch: GVF demo fails in the interactive web interface, rest of documentation will be copy/paste from the paper)
If you do not like to click through the web site, then you can get a quick glimpse of the documentation via the README in BioInterchange's repo:
https://github.com/BioInterchange/BioInterchange
For GFF3/GVF RDFization, two ontologies have been developed: GFF3O and GVF1O (
http://www.biointerchange.org/ontologies.html). Both of them support FALDO as one of two data description options. BioInterchange currently does not write out FALDO RDF yet, but I can hack that when I am on the plane to BH2013.
Third: opacmo's text mining pipeline also runs on Amazon's EC2 now. Well, that will not be that much interesting to most of you. It is just something I talked about last year and its done now.
Fourth: Amazon's Spot market and AWS outreach asked me to write a guest blog post for them and to generalize opacmo's pipeline. The guest post is currently being reviewed, but I have made the generalization of the pipeline available already:
https://github.com/joejimbo/EC2Workflow That tool makes it much easier to run workflows/pipelines on EC2. Please have a look at the sequence diagram to see how the thing works. It may come in handy some day.
Joachim