I can also see this have a potential synergy with our Entrez Neuron project.

-Kei

Matthias Samwald wrote:

Hi Susie,

That sounds amazing. Just for clarification: is this the system that was also part of the presentation of Greg Tucker-Kellogg at WWW2008 [1]? What Semantic Web components/functionalities does it contain?

[1] http://esw.w3.org/topic/HCLS/WWW2008?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=gtuckerkellogg.ppt

Cheers,
Matthias Samwald

DERI Galway, Ireland // http://www.deri.ie/
Semantic Web Company, Austria // http://www.semantic-web.at/






I apologize for the spam, but thought several folks might be interested to
know that Lilly has put it's discovery IT framework into Sourceforge (
http://sourceforge.net/projects/lsg/).

I've included an abstract below that gives a very high level description of
the architecture.

Cheers,

Susie


  Life Science Grid (LSG) is a software infrastructure that Lilly has
  developed for drug discovery. LSG is a plug-in hosting and deployment
  framework that is built on top of the Composite Application Block user
  interface from Microsoft Patterns and Practices. LSG is a rich client
  which requires .NET 2.0 or higher and WSE 3.0. LSG simplifies the task
  of creating new plug-ins by providing a Visual Studio template from
  which developers can quickly learn and expand. The framework also
  supplies an administrative tool for registering and deploying plug-ins
  and composing them into applications. Users can easily choose which
  applications and plug-ins to use enabling task-oriented customization.
  This approach allows us to provide an integrated environment for the
user. It also enhances the development process by providing a foundation
  to build and manage reusable components.







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