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Textpresso Software Developer
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Intern @ Aniseed: work on Chado
BioMart Special Issue in Database
GMOD Workshop Jan 23-25
Galaxy Development Workshop Jan 23
ZFIN Project Manager Wanted
WormBase Is Hiring
GBrowse Version 2.40 Released
Ergatis Release v2r16

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GMOD NewsGBrowse 2.0 HOWTO

Popular GMOD Tools

Genome Browsing and Editing
  GBrowse: Genome annotation viewer
  Apollo: Genome annotation editor
Comparative Genomics
  CMap: Comparative map viewer
  GBrowse_syn: Synteny viewer
Database Tools
  Chado: Biological database schema
  BioMart: Data mining system
  GMODTools: Chado to Fasta, GFF, ...
  InterMine: Data warehousing
Analysis and Annotation
  Galaxy: Data analysis & integration
  MAKER: Genome annotation pipeline
Biological Pathways
  Pathway Tools: Metabolic, regulatory
Publication Curation
  Textpresso: text mining

Welcome to GMOD

GMOD is the Generic Model Organism Database project, a collection of open source software tools for creating and managing genome-scale biological databases. You can use it to create a small laboratory database of genome annotations, or a large web-accessible community database. GMOD tools are in use at many large and small community databases.

How do I Get Started?

See Overview for the big picture. For an introduction to specific GMOD components see the list of the most popular tools at the right, or visit GMOD Components for a comprehensive list of GMOD tools. If GMOD looks promising for your needs, consider attending the next GMOD community meeting.

How do I Get Support?

GMOD support is available from several different sources. Support introduces each support option (this web site, GMOD Mailing Lists, Training and Outreach activities (including GMOD Schools), and the GMOD Help Desk) and offers guidance on which one is the most appropriate for your question.

How do I Get Involved?

As an open source project GMOD relies on the donation of time and software by groups and individuals. Contribution of new tools, adoption of existing ones, and improving the documentation are all welcome. Existing and potential users are encouraged to provide feedback via mailing lists or the help desk. The GMOD Project Page lists projects in need of ideas and developers. You can also attend project meetings. The next meeting will be held March 5-6, 2011 at NESCent in Durham, North Carolina, as a part of GMOD Americas 2011.

Contributing Organizations

FlyBase WormBase wFleaBase CSHL Gramene NESCent SGD MGI DictyBase RGD   BioCyc University of Utah EcoliWiki Berkeley Lab ParameciumDB SGN FlyMine OICR CUGI Penn State University iPlant Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics Emory University University of California Berkeley TAIR

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