Title: How to maintain a community?
1How to maintain a community?
This demonstration is best viewed as a slide
show.To do this, click Slide Show on the top
tool bar, then View show.
Click to move on to the next slide.
2Anyone may make use of CyanoBIKE resources, by
employing the blue Visitors Menu at the left.
Members of the cyanobacteriological community may
log in, enabling them to modify the databases in
certain resources.We'll go through a session as
a new community member.
3Arnaud
Taton
ataton
Center For The Stu
Richmond
1000 W. Cary St.
Virginia
U.S.A.
23284
aataton_at_vcu.edu
Suppose you are Arnaud Taton, a new member of
the cyanobacterialogical community. (click to
continue)
Genomic, Annotation of cyanobacterial ge
Jeff Elhai
4Arnaud
Taton
ataton
Center For The Stu
1000 W. Cary St.
Richmond
Virginia
U.S.A.
23284
aataton_at_vcu.edu
Within a day, you'll be put into the community
database and able to log in as a community member
(click register)
Genomic
Taxonomy
Jeff Elhai
Annick Wilmotte / L
5ataton
When you receive notice that the community
database has been updated with your name, you can
log in.
6After logging in, the blue menu at the left
allows you to go to various resources of interest
to the cyanobacteriological community. Click on
CyanoMembers to see the list of others in the
community and how to contact them.
7Click Directory to see a listing of all
participants and their research interests.
8Click Find to locate a particular participant.
9molecular tools AND ecology
Click the Search Type box to see the ways of
searching the list of participants. Then click on
Interests. Type in the search box the interests
you're look. Finally click Search.
10One match found. Click on it.
11 32 4 366 38 55
5
32 4 366 33 64
You get contact information plus a list of
research interests.(click to continue)
12CyanoBIKE also provides a place for members of
the community to find news of possible interest
to them. Click on CyanoNews.Then try clicking on
meeting announcements.
13A list of future meetings appears. Click on the
ISPP 2006 meeting for more details.
14Announcements do not support responses.Participan
ts are free to post new announcements. Click on
new topic to see how that works.
15Seventh International Conference on Toxic
Cyanobacteria
Seventh International Conference on Toxic
Cyanobacteria, 2007 Rio de Janeiro State,
Brazil 5th - 10th August 2007 www.biof.ufrj.br/cya
no
You can enter information about an upcoming
meeting, including a webpage people can go to for
further information.Click the URL button to make
the webpage a live link.Click Preview to see how
your announcement looks.
16If this looks OK (it does), then click the Submit
button to post the announcement where the world
can see it.
17And there it is! Click to continue.
18CyanoBIKE facilitates discussions amongst
participants by providing forums on topics of
their choosing. Click CyanoForums to get to a
list of forums.Try the Genomic forums.
19Click on any of the forums listed to read posts
or add to the discussion yourself.Genomics not
your style? Try Ecology.
20If you want to start a forum on a topic not on
the list, click Temporary Forum. The webmaster
will put the forum in the appropriate
list.(click to continue)
21CyanoBIKE connects participants to various
resources of interest to the community. One is a
list of references related in some way to
cyanobacteria. Click on CyanoRefs. This brings
you to a page that permits you to conduct quick
searches of the cyanobacterial literature. Click
on Quick Search.
22Omata
Suppose you decide to take the default choice, by
clicking on author. Then type in the name of one
of your favorite authors and press Search.
23Links are provided to get to abstracts and in
some cases full text. Notice that the search is
confined to the cyanobacteriological literature,
so the results are not contaminated by the
sometimes overwhelming number of references that
result from general searches. More complicated
searches are also possible.
24Click the link to CyanoSite to visit a site that
provides images, protocols, and other information
related to cyanobacteria.
25Click the link to CyanoDB to access taxonomic and
phylogenetic information.
26Click the Welcome link at any time to get back to
a description of the choices.
27Click the BioBIKE link to access a powerful
interface, permitting biologists without
computational expertise to perform simple or
complex bioinformatic analyses.
28Click the Help to get to a description of the
resource and help in getting started (you can
access this resource at any time) or start right
in by clicking Enter.
29If you've been to BioBike before, you're offered
a choice of reentering your previous sessions or
starting a new session.For now, turn to another
resource, CyOrf.
30CyOrf facilitates the community annotation of
cyanobacterial genomes. Lots to explore here, but
time to quit (click to continue).
31CyanoBIKE provides a uniform interface for access
to a variety of resources of interest to the
cyanobacteriologist. Please go to
ramsites.net/biobike for links to descriptions
of those resources.