Difference between revisions of "NCBO Hackathon"

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'''Organization:''' [mailto:whetzel@stanford.edu Trish Whetzel] (NCBO / Stanford University)  
 
'''Organization:''' [mailto:whetzel@stanford.edu Trish Whetzel] (NCBO / Stanford University)  
  
'''Registration:''' Coming soon! Please email Dr. Whetzel to indicate your interest in attending.  
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'''Registration:''' Early registration is $25, but spots are limited so register [https://www.certain.com/system/profile/web/index.cfm?PKwebID=0x314432abcd now]. 
  
 
This '''NCBO Hackathon''' will consist of two days of intensive hands-on sessions to facilitate the development of applications using NCBO Web services. We will devote extensive time to your software development project and will have presentations covering a range of topics from high-level application design to low-level coding. You will be able to:
 
This '''NCBO Hackathon''' will consist of two days of intensive hands-on sessions to facilitate the development of applications using NCBO Web services. We will devote extensive time to your software development project and will have presentations covering a range of topics from high-level application design to low-level coding. You will be able to:

Revision as of 12:16, 24 January 2012

The National Center for Biomedical Ontology will hold a Hackathon in its series of Dissemination and Outreach events.

Venue: Stanford University

Date: March 26-27, 2012

Organization: Trish Whetzel (NCBO / Stanford University)

Registration: Early registration is $25, but spots are limited so register now.

This NCBO Hackathon will consist of two days of intensive hands-on sessions to facilitate the development of applications using NCBO Web services. We will devote extensive time to your software development project and will have presentations covering a range of topics from high-level application design to low-level coding. You will be able to:

  • Brainstorm ideas for applications
  • Discuss coding issues, performance tuning, and future development plans
  • Learn about the suite of NCBO Web services and how they are (and have been!) used in applications. Examples include access to ontologies, search, mappings, term proposals, text annotation, and biomedical resource search (the “Resource Index”)
  • Hear about the design of our RDF triple store and learn how to access the triple-store directly from your application using the SPARQL query language