Another global training success with the ‘SARS-CoV-2 Data Analysis and Monitoring’ workshop

Australian researchers recently took part in the international workshop, SARS-CoV-2 Data Analysis and Monitoring with Galaxy, thanks to the support of the Galaxy Australia team.

Joining 750 registrants from 82 countries, local researchers participated in four days of training in SARS-CoV-2 data analysis and data management. Experts from Africa, Europe, the USA and Australia came together to offer 25 tutorials, 7 hours of pre-recorded videos (including lectures, demos and hands-on) and 6 hours of live Q&A sessions.

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What to do when your bioinformatics outgrows your compute

Need to take your bioinformatics to the next level? We partnered with Sydney Informatics Hub to offer advice that will help you find the compute your research needs. You can now watch the recordings of the popular webinars 'Where to go when your bioinformatics outgrows your compute' and 'High performance bioinformatics: submitting your best NCMAS application' and consult the 'cheat sheet' to identify your next steps.

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Draft tea tree genome published by Southern Cross University team

A new genome assembly and annotation promises insights into the genetic foundations of economically valuable traits in tea tree (Melaleuca alternifolia). The team at Southern Cross University’ responsible for A high-quality draft genome for Melaleuca alternifolia (tea tree): a new platform for evolutionary genomics of myrtaceous terpene-rich species made excellent use of national research infrastructure provided by Australian BioCommons, including Galaxy Australia and soon-to-be-launched Fgenesh++ and Apollo services.

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Let's do this Biohackathon together!

Are you interested in joining this year’s Biohackathon Europe from home? We’d like to join forces with you to support each other during the late nights. We'll provide snacks and a way to keep in touch when your eyelids are getting heavy.

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Christina Hall
New high memory computers fast-track insights into large genomes

Galaxy Australia’s new high memory servers have delivered an impressive leap forward for scientists with large datasets and computationally-intensive analyses. The large and complex genome of Australia’s national floral emblem, the Golden Wattle (Acacia pycnantha) was assembled this month with game-changing efficiency, in a promising test of new infrastructure capacity.

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BioCommons presents: How to build national bioinformatics services

Earlier this month, BioCommons led the international 'Knowledge-sharing workshop on the design and operation of national- and international-scale bioinformatics services' as part of the ELIXIR All Hands 2021 meeting. Bringing our experience in the development and operation of targeted infrastructure, platforms and services for bioinformatics, the BioCommons team and over 100 members of ELIXIR nodes came together to discuss shared ambitions, challenges and successes. The Australian perspective of nurturing the evolution of ‘grass roots’ and best efforts research infrastructure, to robust, highly available, supported and trusted services was presented.

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New high memory servers for Galaxy Australia

Researchers’ capacity to analyse their life science data was boosted this week when high memory compute servers for Galaxy Australia came online at the University of Melbourne.

Researchers in areas such as machine learning, cheminformatic analysis and long read sequencing will be pushing new limits now the new high memory virtual machines and large-capacity / high-performance local storage enable tools with particularly high memory demands like Mothur, Trinity, Canu and BLAST.

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Galaxy Australia team helping to lead a truly global research activity

The successful mature research software infrastructure project that is Galaxy has evolved over many years, and has benefited from the participation of thousands of people around the world. Responding to the increasing complexity that comes with a rapidly growing audience and to fully engage the international Galaxy Community, a range of new governance structures have been formed. Aussies are well represented in many of these new community groups, reflecting the truly global collaboration and the esteem earned over the years of Galaxy Australia contributions.

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