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BOSC 2011

Planning for BOSC 2012 is now underway!

The 12th Annual Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC 2011) was held immediately before the 19th Annual International Conference on Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology (ISMB 2011) at the Austria Center in Vienna, Austria. BOSC 2011 took place July 15-16; the main ISMB Conference is July 17-19, 2011. Codefest 2011 was held right before BOSC 2011 (July 13-14, 2011).

The BOSC schedule can be viewed as html or downloaded as a PDF file. You can also download the complete proceedings. This large (6 Mb) PDF file includes the schedule and all of the talk and poster abstracts.

Slides for the BOSC talks are now linked (where available) from the BOSC schedule.

Congratulations to the winners of the BOSC 2011 Student Travel Fellowships: Florian P. Breitwieser, Kerensa McElroy, and Konstantin Okonechnikov!

Congratulations to the winners (tied) of the Audience Favorite Talk: Andreas Hildebrandt and Konstantinos Krampis!

Overview

The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) is sponsored by the Open Bioinformatics Foundation (OBF), a non-profit group dedicated to promoting the practice and philosophy of Open Source software development within the biological research community.

Many open source bioinformatics packages are widely used by the research community across many application areas and form a cornerstone in enabling research in the genomic and post-genomic era. Open source bioinformatics software has facilitated rapid innovation, dissemination, and wide adoption of new computational methods, reusable software components, and standards. One of the hallmarks of BOSC is the coming together of the open source developer community in one location to meet face-to-face. This creates synergy where participants can work together to create use cases, prototype working code, or run bootcamps for developers from other projects as short, informal, and hands-on tutorials in new software packages and emerging technologies. In short, BOSC is not just a conference for presentations of completed work, but is a dynamic meeting where collaborative work gets done and attendees can learn about new or ongoing developments that they can directly apply to their own work.

Please spread the word about BOSC to interested developers; all are welcome. On Twitter, we recommend the hash tag #bosc2011 (see tweets).

BOSC 2010 was held in Boston, MA, from July 9-10. Selected peer-reviewed papers from BOSC 2010 were published in BMC Bioinformatics on 21 December, 2010.

Sponsors

We thank Eagle Genomics, Ltd. and an anonymous donor for sponsoring three Student Travel Awards at BOSC 2011.

Keynote Speakers

Lawrence Hunter

Lawrence Hunter is Professor of Pharmacology and Computer Science at the University of Colorado and director of the Computational Bioscience Program at the School of Medicine. He is one of the founders of ISMB, a fellow of the ISCB, and is well known for contributions in a broad range of problems in computational biology.

Dr. Hunter will be giving a talk entitled The role of openness in knowledge-based systems for biomedicine. Knowledge-based approaches to the analysis to genome-scale data require the extraction, sharing and use of very large amounts of knowledge about biomedicine. Developments such as the open source software movement, the Open Biomedical Ontologies, Semantic Web standards such as OWL and SPARQL, and the spread of open access publishing are creating the potential for powerful knowledge-based computer systems that may play an important role in the future of biomedical research. Yet several critical challenges remain before this vision can be realized. Dr. Hunter will discuss some relevant recent resources developed in his lab, some of the socio-political barriers that remain, and what you can do to overcome them.

Matt Wood

As the Technology Evangelist for Amazon Web Services, Matt discusses the technical and organisational aspects of cloud computing across the world. With a background in the life sciences, Matt is interested in helping teams of all sizes bring their ideas to life through technology. Before joining Amazon he built web-scale search engines at Cornell University, sequenced DNA in Hinxton and developed scientific software in Cambridge. He is a frequent speaker at international conferences, a blogger, published author and an advocate of research productivity.

Matt’s talk, entitled Into the Wonderful, will feature a discussion of the constraints of working with the size, scope and complexity of modern research data, and how cloud computing can help accelerate academic research. We’ll take a look at the current state of the art, the role cloud computing plays in increasing the impact of open source tools, the use of public hosted data in the cloud and how academic cloud platforms can help promote collaboration, reproducibility and reuse across disciplines.

Important Dates

Open Source License Requirement

The Open Bioinformatics Foundation, which sponsors BOSC, is dedicated to promoting the practice and philosophy of Open Source Software Development within the biological research community. For this reason, if a submitted talk proposal concerns a specific software system for use by the research community, then that software must be licensed with a recognized Open Source License, and be available for download, including source code, by a tar/zip file accessed through ftp/http or through a widely used version control system like cvs/subversion/git/bazaar/Mercurial.

See the following pages for further information:

Sessions

Organizing Committee

Co-Chairs

Members

Ex Officio (Members of the OBF Board)

Previous BOSCs

The first BOSC was held in 2000. Please see past BOSC conferences for information about the first 11 conferences.

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