BOSC 2008 Call for Abstracts

The 9th annual Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC 2008) will take 
place in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, as one of several Special Interest Group 
(SIG) meetings occurring in conjunction with the 16th annual Intelligent 
Systems for Molecular Biology Conference (ISMB 2008).

The Bioinformatics Open Source Conference (BOSC) is sponsored by the Open 
Bioinformatics Foundation (O|B|F), a non-profit group dedicated to promoting 
the practice and philosophy of Open Source software development within the 
biological research community. Many Open Source bioinformatics packages are 
widely used by the research community across many application areas and form a 
cornerstone in enabling research in the genomic and post-genomic era. Open 
source bioinformatics software has facilitated rapid innovation and 
dissemination of new computational methods as well as informatics 
infrastructure. Since the work of the Open Source Bioinformatics Community 
represents some of the most cutting edge of Bioinformatics in general, the 
overall theme for the conference this year is "Tackling Hard Problems with 
Emerging Technologies". Topics under this umbrella include cyberinfrastructure, 
grid computing and workflow management and discovery, and visualization. We 
will also have a s!
 eries of update talks about the main Open Source Bioinformatics Software 
suites.

One of the hallmarks of BOSC is the coming together of the open source 
developer community in one location. A face-to-face meeting of this community 
creates synergy where participants can work together to create use cases, 
prototype working code, or run bootcamps for developers from other projects as 
short, informal, and hands-on tutorials in new software packages and emerging 
technologies. In short, BOSC is not just a conference for presentations of 
completed work, but is a dynamic meeting where collaborative work gets done.

This year, BOSC is accepting abstract submissions on the conference theme 
"Tackling Hard Problems with Emerging Technologies". The conference theme 
reflects that there are new technologies emerging on both the scientific front 
(new sequencing technologies, etc.) and the IT front (workflows, mashup/web 
2.0, improvements in all of the major programming languages, etc.), which may 
allow the open source community to solve problems that were previously 
intractable. Abstracts may be submitted for the following topics.

1. Cyberinfrastructure - We are interested in presentations on topics dealing 
with the development of infrastructure on the web to facilitate software and 
data re-use (mashups, or traditional), interoperability and inter-process 
communication, system/service discovery, and data movement and modeling in 
distributed systems. This may include peer-to-peer systems of data transfer, 
Web Services, various flavors of data representation (SOAP, JSON, XML, others), 
and technologies commonly referred to under the Web 2.0 paradigm (e.g. 
folksonomies/tagging, user-based content generation, content feeds, and Social 
Networking).

2. Grid Computing and Workflow Management and Discovery - We particularly 
invite talks that report progress in making workflow systems easier to use and 
on how to do distributed-collaborative research , e.g. workflows that encompass 
the coordination of systems running in different parts of the world.

3. Visualization - Visualization is a maturing area of open source software 
development. We particularly invite talks that demonstrate innovative 
visualization systems in the context of workflows.

4. Open Source Software - Speakers will present talks on the use, development, 
or philosophy of open source software in bioinformatics.

5. Bio* Open Source Project Updates - We invite abstracts from the 
representatives of the open source projects sponsored by or affiliated to the 
O|B|F (see Projects).


Please consult the official BOSC 2008 website at 
http://www.open-bio.org/wiki/Upcoming_BOSC_conference  for all updates and 
extra information.

Submission Process:
All abstracts must be submitted through our Open Conference Systems site 
(http://events.open-bio.org/BOSC2008/openconf.php).
The form will ask for a small Abstract Text to be pasted into it, and a full 
paper.  The small Abstract text should be a summary, while the longer abstract 
(should provide more details, including the open-source license requirement 
details)
Full-length abstracts are limited to one page with one inch (2.5 cm) margins on 
the top, sides, and bottom.  The full-length abstract should include the title, 
authors, and affiliations.  We prefer your abstract to be in PDF format, 
although plain t

Important Dates:
May 11: Abstract submission deadline.
June 2: Notification of accepted talks.
June 4: Early registration discount cut-off.
July 18-19: BOSC 2008!

We hope to see you at BOSC 2008!

Kam Dahlquist and Darin London
BOSC 2008 Co-organizers

                         

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