We have a winner!
The randomatic_3000 Perl script has chosen a winner:
I will be reaching out to the winner via twitter, and once I get Vince to sign the book, I will mail it to them. Congratulations!
The randomatic_3000 Perl script has chosen a winner:
I will be reaching out to the winner via twitter, and once I get Vince to sign the book, I will mail it to them. Congratulations!
The deadline for my competition to win a signed copy of Vince Buffalo's excellent Bioinformatics Data Skills book has now passed. There were 65 entries and later this week I will randomly choose a winner. For the competition I simply asked people to tweet an answer to the following question:
Name a useful bioinformatics skill
I thought I would share some of the entries that people tweeted. In reverse order, here are my ten favorite answers. It was difficult choosing which ones made the cut, and there were many other excellent answers. Thanks to everyone who took part! I hope to announce the winner later this week.
This skill may not be so easy to acquire…
@ACGT_blog Knowing @vsbuffalo. #acgt
— Paul Smaldino (@psmaldino) September 14, 2015
Two people came up with this suggestion…
Useful bioinformatics skill: Patience... #acgt
— David Joly (@idjoly) September 24, 2015
@ACGT_blog @kbradnam a useful bioinformatics data skill: patience #ACGT
— Dave Tang (@davetang31) September 14, 2015
I think this answer also applies to 'scripts you wrote yourself several years ago'…
Useful bioinformatics skill: The ability to understand the scripts written by others. #ACGT
— goutham atla (@Geek_y) September 15, 2015
Clouded by the Dark Side, your code is.
@acgt_blog A useful bioinformatics data skill: anger management #acgt
— Neil Saunders (@neilfws) September 14, 2015
If you ever come up with some useful code snippet, the chances are that you will want to reuse it at some point.
Keep your own oneliners in a online notebook #ACGT
— genomepandit (@genomepandit) September 14, 2015
This was the most popular answer in the competition…
Critical bioinformatics skill: VERSION CONTROL.
#ACGT https://t.co/qCnHzbGDJt
— Aaron Barnes (@MicroTolo) September 17, 2015
My entry for ‘useful bioinformatics data skill’ #ACGT competition: version control
— Lex Nederbragt (@lexnederbragt) September 14, 2015
Useful bioinformatics skill: version control repository for every project #ACGT
— Katrina Kutchko (@kutchko) September 23, 2015
@ACGT_blog @vsbuffalo a useful bioinformatics data skill is version control! #ACGT
— Jasmine Dumas (@jasdumas) September 14, 2015
Yes, yes, a thousand times yes!
Proper code documentation. #ACGT
— will shoemaker (@shoemakah) September 14, 2015
If you ever run into any sort of bioinformatics problem, you can probably assume that someone has suffered from the same problem as you, and that someone else has posted a useful answer online.
useful bioinformatics data skill: read manuals and find solutions on BioStars, SEQanswers, and Twitter #ACGT
— copypasteusa (@copypasteusa) September 17, 2015
Two closely related answers, so they can both share the number two spot…
Useful bioinformatics skill: trust nothing without testing #ACGT
— Gitanshu Munjal (@grmunjal) September 15, 2015
#ACGT A very useful bioinformatics skill is that never test any program or any code with huge dataset and always use a subset of data
— upendra devisetty (@upendra_35) September 16, 2015
And my favorite answer was one by Bastien Chevreux (@BaCh_mira)…
#ACGT Useful BioInf skill: Be skeptical. Data isn't wrong just because it contradicts "basic textbook knowledge". Nature doesn't read books.
— Bastien Chevreux (@BaCh_mira) September 15, 2015
In bioinformatics it can be good to have some healthy skepticism about the tools and data that you use. Not all genome assemblies are perfect (many are far from perfect), not all gene annotations are correct, and not all tools use defafult values that will work well with your data. Be skeptical!
Maybe one of these answers will be lucky enough to be chosen by the magical 'Perl-script-of-destiny' (that I still need to write). The winner will hopefully be announced in a day or two.
I have an extra copy of the fantastic Bioinformatics Data Skills book by Vince Buffalo (who you should all be following on twitter at @vsbuffalo). I've come up with a fun little competition to let someone have a chance of winning this signed copy.
All you have to do is write a tweet that includes the #ACGT hashtag (so I can track all of the answers), which provides the following information:
Name a useful bioinformatics data skill
The winner will be chosen randomly — hopefully by a powerful scripted solution that Vince will help me with — in two weeks time. I will post details of any interesting (or funny) suggestions that you come up with on this site. The full details are below.