Team:Vanderbilt Software/Project

From 2014.igem.org

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       <h3>Current Status</h3>
       <h3>Current Status</h3>
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       <p>The project in its current status can be found in its <a href="https://github.com/igemsoftware/Vanderbilt_2014">repository on github</a>.</p>
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       <p>The project in its current status can be found in its <a href="https://github.com/igemsoftware/Vanderbilt_2014">repository on github</a>. Documentation on the produced software tool can be found on the <a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Vanderbilt_Software/Program">Program</a> page</p>
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     <p>The project description is split into four main sections:</p>
     <p>The project description is split into four main sections:</p>
     <ol>
     <ol>
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       <li>Motivation</li>
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       <li><a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Vanderbilt_Software/Program">Motivation</a></li>
       <li>Process</li>
       <li>Process</li>
       <li>Experimentation</li>
       <li>Experimentation</li>

Revision as of 22:26, 17 October 2014


Home Project Team Attributions

Project Description

Sections

Darwin is a software package to document changes to DNA which allows for easy, standardized, and collaborative editing on DNA data up to the genome scale. It builds off of tested and proven version control software, so the entire history of the tracked data is easy to browse and transfer. But Darwin is specifically focused on DNA data, speeding up the tracking process and offering significant security improvements from any current system.

Because Darwin uses existing version control systems, the majority of the heavy lifting is complete already; Darwin can be installed right on top of the existing software. Darwin's contribution is to parse and format the biological data so that it can be used more effectively with these systems. It uses a variety of heuristics to effectively split the data and granularize the changes made to produce change logging orders of magnitude more time- and space-efficient than any other method.

Current Status

The project in its current status can be found in its repository on github. Documentation on the produced software tool can be found on the Program page

The project description is split into four main sections:

  1. Motivation
  2. Process
  3. Experimentation
  4. Conclusions

It's important for teams to describe all the creativity that goes into an iGEM project, along with all the great ideas your team will come up with over the course of your work.

It's also important to clearly describe your achievements so that judges will know what you tried to do and where you succeeded. Please write your project page such that what you achieved is easy to distinguish from what you attempted.