Science is vital – to public health

tl;dr? Science is Vital! Write George Osbourne a postcard, telling him why you think science is vital. Write to your MP! Last night I went to the Science is Vital rally (Science: as vital as ever). I have to express my admiration for all the organisers and presenters, who I thought did a tremendous job…

GenomeTrakr meeting notes

Notes for GenomeTrakr 2015 meeting Context These notes were taken during the FDA GenomeTrakr Meeting held at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington DC, USA from 23-24 September 2015. The notes are intended to be as objective as possible. Personal opinions or speculation are prefixed by the author’s initials below: Contributors to this document PA…

5 useful things in Excel

There is a certain amount of snootiness amongst bioinformaticians when it comes to Excel. If a graph with the default excel colour scheme is showed at a conference there may be sideways glances and sniggers amongst the technorati. However, excel remains the most commonly used tool for bioinformatics (citation needed). When lab staff first join our…

Interesting new model for data sharing

Mike Schatz has posted an interesting paper on Biorxiv on ‘The next 20 years of genome research‘. In it, he argues that in future ‘it will become less and less practical to transfer data into these [NCBI/EBI] archives as they exist today’ and that ‘In its place, we will see the rise of federated approaches…

CLIMB hackathon outcome

TL;DR CLIMB is fricking awesome Last weekend, the MRC CLIMB initiative hosted a hackathon, with the broad aim of using the CLIMB resource to do some cool stuff, which Nick Loman has recently got up and running at Birmingham. There was lots of pizza, beer and bbq, as well as hacking. One of the things we…

Using GATK to call indels in bacterial genomes

TL:DR If you are interested in calling indels with GATK, check out the below. If not, don’t. ——————————————————– So, this annoying guy asked me to add an analysis of indels* to a paper that has been itching to get off my desk for months. I finally got around to doing this, so thought I would…

Adventures with Nanopore

This is a guest post by Alex Jironkin (@biocomputerist) in the core bioinformatics group at Colindale. TL;DR: Try assembling your hybrid Illumina-MinION data with smaller number of kmers for better assemblies By now you probably heard about the new Nanopore technology, it is truly marvellous bit of engineering. The DNA strands are pulled through the…