Team:Calgary/22 July 2009
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- | + | Retrospective Notebook: This entry was not written on this day, but derived later from working notes I made that day. | |
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+ | Spent much of today doing research, about potential systems to incorporate into the simulator levels, and of other elements of the cell that might be worth representing. Still trying to wrap my head around how to do something like the arabinose operon, which requires folding DNA, or how to do the Lux operon, which requires distinct compartments. | ||
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+ | Came up with two potential systems for the levels: a positively autoregulated system (ie, permanent switch for cell memory), and an [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v456/n7221/full/nature07389.html] interesting oscillator. This inspired me to investigate regulation motifs known to systems biology in greater detail. | ||
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+ | My work in Second Life was stopped cold though, when the TetR object that I had been working on got knocked away from my working space accidentally, and I wasn't able to chase after it fast enough. The TetR object simply vanished, and the script inside had seen many changes but hadn't been backed up in more than a week! | ||
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+ | I searched the internet for solutions to the problem, and after all those suggestions failed to find my TetR I resorted to using a server administration tool to return *all* of my object across the entire island to my inventory. It still didn't show up, which indicated to me that my TetR might be well and truly gone. | ||
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+ | In how many other development environments do you lose work because a representation of a physical object containing your code gets lost? | ||
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Revision as of 20:55, 21 August 2009
UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY