OpenWetWare:Presentations/iGEM 2006 Teach the teachers workshop
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Randy Rettberg asked if we would be interested in giving a short presentation on OWW at the iGEM Teach the Teacher's workshop on May 6 at MIT. Essentially it would involve introducing OWW and describing how it is a useful resource to iGEM folks.
See the iGEM wiki for information on what iGEM is and the workshop.
Introduction to OpenWetWare
What is a wiki, why is it useful?
- enables anyone to contribute so leads to a much more dynamic webpage
Summary of OpenWetWare's beginnings
- Started in the Endy and Knight labs as a means of recording and sharing useful information.
- Permitted a new venue to communicate and collaborate with others about research ideas and projects.
- By forging links between iGEM and OpenWetWare, we hope to
- integrate iGEM participants more tightly with the research community
- create ongoing resources stemming from iGEM for the synthetic biology research community
How is OpenWetWare useful for iGEM teams?
- Stong synthetic biology presence on the site (it is the home of syntheticbiology.org).
- Q&A / Experimental troubleshooting
- Additional features
- Automatic Pubmed citations via Biblio.
- Recent changes filtering. See iGEM on OWW recent changes.
How is OpenWetWare useful for labs?
- We have about ~10 labs using OWW as their primary lab webpage. This enables the lab web page to remain very up-to-date and dynamic, as well as allows lab members to engage a larger community of potential collaborators than are normally available.
things you may not do currently, but which are easy on a wiki
- long term storage of lab information (protocols)
- Helps with the rapid turnover of personel in labs, collaborative protocol editing tunes protocols used by several lab members, searchable, information.
- up-to-date, high content level lab webpage
- remove the webmaster "bottleneck" - democratized contribution
How to get started on OWW
- Getting started: a quick guide to using OpenWetWare.