Dear Colleagues,

A global “tree of life” will transform biological research in a broad range of 
disciplines from ecology to bioengineering. To help facilitate that 
transformation, the OpenTree<http://opentreeoflife.org/> project [1] now 
provides online access to >4000 published phylogenies, and a newly generated 
tree covering more than 2.5 million species.


The next step is to build tools to enable the community to use these resources. 
 To meet this aim, OpenTree<http://www.opentreeoflife.org/>, 
Arbor<http://www.arborworkflows.com/> [2], and NESCent’s 
HIP<http://www.evoio.org/wiki/HIP> working groups [3] are staging a week-long 
hackathon September 15 to 19 at U. Michigan, Ann Arbor.  Participants in this 
“Tree-for-all” will work in small teams to develop tools that use OpenTree’s 
web services to extract, annotate, or add data in ways useful to the community. 
 Teams also may focus on testing, expanding and documenting the web services.


How could a global phylogeny be useful in your research or teaching?  What 
other data from OpenTree would be valuable?  How could OpenTree web services be 
integrated into familiar workflows and analysis tools?   How could we add to 
the database of published trees, or enrich it with annotations?


If you can imagine using these resources, and you have the skills to work 
collaboratively to turn those ideas into products (as a coder, or working 
side-by-side with coders), we invite you to apply for the hackathon.  The full 
call for participation (http://bit.ly/1ioPPMc) provides instructions for how to 
apply, and how to share your ideas with potential teammates (strongly 
encouraged prior to applying).  Applications are due July 8th. Travel support 
is provided.  Women and underrepresented minorities are especially encouraged 
to apply.


If you have questions, contact Karen Cranston 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, @kcranstn, 
OpenTree), Arlin Stoltzfus ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, HIP), Julie 
Allen ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, HIP), or Luke Harmon 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>, Arbor).


Sincerely,


Brian Sidlauskas (HIP)



[1] http://www.opentreeoflife.org<http://www.opentreeoflife.org/>

[2] http://www.arborworkflows.com/

[3] http://www.evoio.org/wiki/HIP (Hackathons, Interoperability, Phylogenies)



--
Brian Sidlauskas
Assistant Professor
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife
104 Nash Hall
Oregon State University
Corvallis, OR 97331-3803

Voice: 541-737-6789
Fax: 541-737-3590
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://oregonstate.edu/~sidlausb/

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