Team:Freiburg software/Project
From 2009.igem.org
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Practically a typical Wave-conversations - called a wavelet - normally works like this: | Practically a typical Wave-conversations - called a wavelet - normally works like this: | ||
- | User Alice creates a new Wavelet. | + | User Alice creates a new Wavelet. She than invites his friend Bob to join the conversation. Bob accepts and can now write Messages to the wave. Each message creates a so called Blip. What differentiates Wave from normal instant-messaging is, that if Alice and Bob decide to write an Document together, they can start to edit the same Blip together. Each change they make to the text there is showed to the other on in real time. If they want, they can also use a build-in playback feature similar to the version-history in wikis, to review the changes made to the wavelet. |
Additional Google has published an API for writing so called Robots and Gadgets for Wave. While Robots are small programs written in Python or Java, which can participate in Wave similar to normal users, Gadgets are small Webpages that can be embedded into a wave-conversation. | Additional Google has published an API for writing so called Robots and Gadgets for Wave. While Robots are small programs written in Python or Java, which can participate in Wave similar to normal users, Gadgets are small Webpages that can be embedded into a wave-conversation. |
Revision as of 19:35, 17 October 2009
Contents |
Introduction
Motivation
Google Wave
Google Wave is "a personal communication and collaboration tool" developed by Google. It is a web-based service, computing platform, and communications protocol designed to merge e-mail, instant messaging, wikis, and social networking. It has a strong collaborative and real-time focus and provides several ways to extend its functionality.
Wave basically consists of an open communication protocol similar to email, and client and server-software. Like Email, the protocol aims to be open, decentralized and easy to adapt, but includes modern achievements like real-time-communication and rich formated text with embedded data as well. At the moment, the only working server and client software for Wave is also written by Google, but with the protocol being open-source already, other - Google independent - servers and clients will soon be available.
Practically a typical Wave-conversations - called a wavelet - normally works like this: User Alice creates a new Wavelet. She than invites his friend Bob to join the conversation. Bob accepts and can now write Messages to the wave. Each message creates a so called Blip. What differentiates Wave from normal instant-messaging is, that if Alice and Bob decide to write an Document together, they can start to edit the same Blip together. Each change they make to the text there is showed to the other on in real time. If they want, they can also use a build-in playback feature similar to the version-history in wikis, to review the changes made to the wavelet.
Additional Google has published an API for writing so called Robots and Gadgets for Wave. While Robots are small programs written in Python or Java, which can participate in Wave similar to normal users, Gadgets are small Webpages that can be embedded into a wave-conversation.
BioJava
BioJava is an open-source project dedicated to providing a [http://www.java.sun.com Java] framework for processing biological data. It provides analytical and statistical routines, parsers for common file formats and allows the manipulation of sequences and 3D structures. The goal of the biojava project is to facilitate rapid application development for bioinformatics.
Using the scalable, cross-platform, network-aware power of Java technology, researchers at Great Britain's famed Sanger Institute for genetic study have spawned BioJava--an open-source project dedicated to providing genomic researchers with a Java technology-based developer's toolkit.
BioJava offers bioinformatics developers over 1200 classes and interfaces for manipulating genomic sequences, file parsing, CORBA interoperability, and more. The facility is already being used at major research and pharmaceutical centers, and in over 85 countries around the world.
Why BioJava ?
There are three major frameworks for processing biological data: BioPerl, BioJava and BioPhyton.
As google wave provides developer APIs both for the Java and the Phyton programming language, there was the decision between BioJava and BioPhyton.
Why we have choosen the BioJava framework:
BioJava has grown tremendously since its beginnings. The most recent site statistics show 1,264 public classes and interfaces, with over 200,000 lines of code, and over 14 people regularly contributing to the code. This huge amount of features are summarized and classified in only about 15 interfaces, so they are really simple and intuitively in use.
BioJava provides objects for all kind of synthetic biologists needs, which there are:
- Basic manipulation of sequences, like translations, building complements and doing multiple sequence alignments.
- Viewing sequences in different formats, like feature added sequence presentations and circular views.
- Import and export sequence data in different file formats.
- Accessing databases like BioSQL and [http://www.ensembl.org Ensembl].
Concept
Our concept is to create a collaborative software suite called SynBioWave for synthetic biology purpose. SynBioWave is a Google Wave extension using BioJava to add synthetic biology functionality, giving synthetic biological research access to the collaborative and interactive web 2.0.
SynBioWave makes use of Wave's powerful communication and collaboration functionality and is designed to be be easily extended with new synthetic biology functionality. Mashing up the reinvention of the email with a major library for processing synthetic biology data, raises science collaboration to a new level.
Our small team of three developers will not be able to create a full-value synthetic biology software by iGEM Jamboree 2009. Our goal is to lay the foundation for a robust software suite and to implement some basic synthetic biological functionality.
SynBioWaves' key features
- open source, free web application accessible from every computer connected to the internet
- strong communication and collaboration functionality
- basic synthetic biology functionality
- easy to extended with additional synthetic biology functionality
The road to success
For addressing a wide audience of users and contributers, SynBioWave is published under a free licence. This will attract other developers creating new functions or modify the software for their own purpose.
One of the key goals of SynBioWave is the feature of easy-extendibility. We want to create a framework that allows other developers to contribute new biosynthetic functionality with a minimum knowledge of Wave development. For this purpose SynBioWave offers a abstract Robot Class which can be regarded as a template for biosynthetic functions. This concept has very nice side-effect: SynBioWave can be easily customized by adding and removing robots which represent certain function.
SynBioWave will not only be a simple mashup, a synthetic biological software running inside a wavelet. It will be a perfect symbioses of Wave and BioJava. The look and feel of SynBiowave will perfectly fit in the Wave concept. Waves real-time-editing, multi-user-editing functions as well as the playback function must work in harmony with SynBioWave. This sounds quite trivial. But looking at the current Wave extensions gives reason to be concerned about this.