Dear all,

 We will have a Sprint again, and it is already two months from now,
 on February 23rd and 24th in Kiel, Germany,
 with the meeting's homepage on
http://wiki.debian.org/DebianMed/Meeting/Kiel2013 
http://wiki.debian.org/DebianMed/Meeting/Kiel2013&lang=de 
as a reference. As for the last years the meeting is open to everyone with a 
strong interest in the packaging of software close to biomedical research and 
practice. This includes site admins and upstream developers alike. Whoever 
would like to come, please add your name to the list or send an email to 
Steffen to be added. Do not reserve rooms in Kiel yourselves, just tag your 
entry as in need of accomodation. A night will be below or equal to 50 Euros. 
We are negotiating still between a few places. Kiel is at the Baltic Sea, just 
north of Hamburg.

The Centre of Molecular Biosciences in Kiel migrated their Linux infrastructure 
to Ubuntu just a few months ago. And when asked, André and Ingo immediately 
volunteered to host our next Sprint, and more importantly, they happily grant 
us insights to their impressive robotics and software infrastructure, seeking 
ways to collaborate with (as a part of) us to foster and disseminate their 
developments and workflows in general: Genome - Proteome - Interactome - you 
name it. Kiel is also home to SciEngines, the FPGA company who gave us the 
tutorial last year. For them, as they are mostly Electroengineers, this meeting 
of ours is important to help understanding this Open Source at a 
deeper-than-intellectual level. They'll be attending in larger numbers and we 
get some hands on experiences. Let us see if we get their 
command-line-BLAST-compatibility shift a bit from the mere sequence analyses 
(as much as they may be needed there) more into the realms of structural 
biology - curious.

 Our last year was successful, and that also because of our past Sprints, with 
a completely smooth interaction with other distributions. Tim of BioLinux for 
instance directly feeds back all issues he encounters. We can possibly also 
mention in this context the DebianMed PPA for Ubuntu users. We have Laszlo of 
PredictProtein.org who helped enormously - with his packages and his local 
spreading of the distribution. We got a series of additional contributors to 
Debian Med. Some are part of the upstream development teams, which gives some 
particular strength to our distribution. Also, the long-standing contributors 
have become Debian Mentors or even already Debian Developers. And 
fascinatingly, the Medical Informatics side of Debian Med, which gave us our 
name, has grown significantly and would be well worth another Sprint in 2013. 
We should look back a bit, celebrate, and look forward, to overcome the one or 
other still weakish spot of ours and think ahead.

 So, we hope you all to find some time in late February and just sign up. 
Debian helps with travel for up to four of its Developers / Maintainers. Many 
thanks for that. Anybody reading this with some interest to help volunteers 
with an extra travel fellowship, please get in contact with us.

 Hoping to meet many of yours in Kiel, in the name of all the helping hands for 
this meeting

 Andreas and Steffen

Reply via email to