WEBINAR: KBase - A knowledge base for systems biology
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘KBase - A knowledge base for systems biology’. This webinar took place on 22 September 2021.
Event description
Developed for bench biologists and bioinformaticians, The Department of Energy Systems...
Keywords: Systems Biology, FAIR Research, Open Source Software, Metagenomics, Microbiology
WEBINAR: KBase - A knowledge base for systems biology
https://zenodo.org/records/5717580
https://dresa.org.au/materials/webinar-kbase-a-knowledge-base-for-systems-biology-653d9753-989d-4194-9230-6e2d90652955
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘KBase - A knowledge base for systems biology’. This webinar took place on 22 September 2021.
Event description
Developed for bench biologists and bioinformaticians, The Department of Energy Systems Biology Knowledgebase (KBase) is a free, open source, software and data science platform designed to meet the grand challenge of systems biology: predicting and designing biological function.
This webinar will provide an overview of the KBase mission and user community, as well as a tour of the online platform and basic functionality. You’ll learn how KBase can support your research: Upload data, run analysis tools (Apps), share your analysis with collaborators, and publish your data and reproducible workflows. We’ll highlight a brand new feature that enables users to link environment and measurement data to sequencing data. You’ll also find out how KBase supports findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) research by providing open, reproducible, shareable bioinformatics workflows.
Materials are shared under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International agreement unless otherwise specified and were current at the time of the event.
Files and materials included in this record:
Event metadata (PDF): Information about the event including, description, event URL, learning objectives, prerequisites, technical requirements etc.
Index of training materials (PDF): List and description of all materials associated with this event including the name, format, location and a brief description of each file.
Q&A for Australian BioCommons KBase Webinar [PDF]: Document containing answers to questions asked during the webinar and links to additional resources
Introduction to KBase: Australian BioCommons Webinar [PDF]: Slides presented during the webinar
Materials shared elsewhere:
A recording of the webinar is available on the Australian BioCommons YouTube Channel:
https://youtu.be/tJ94i9gOJfU
The slides are also available as Google slides:
https://tinyurl.com/KBase-webinar-slides
Melissa Burke (melissa@biocommons.org.au)
Dow, Ellen (orcid: 0000-0002-2079-0260)
Wood-Charlson, Elisha (orcid: 0000-0001-9557-7715)
Systems Biology, FAIR Research, Open Source Software, Metagenomics, Microbiology
WEBINAR: bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software’. This webinar took place on 21 June 2022.
Event description
bio.tools provides easy access to essential scientific...
Keywords: Bioinformatics, Research software, EDAM, Workflows, FAIR
WEBINAR: bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software
https://zenodo.org/records/7024050
https://dresa.org.au/materials/webinar-bio-tools-making-it-easier-to-find-understand-and-cite-biological-tools-and-software-aea38c9e-0b40-4308-bafd-f7580563f520
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software’. This webinar took place on 21 June 2022.
Event description
bio.tools provides easy access to essential scientific and technical information about software, command-line tools, databases and services. It’s backed by ELIXIR, the European Infrastructure for Biological Information, and is being used in Australia to register software (e.g. Galaxy Australia, prokka). It underpins the information provided in the Australian BioCommons discovery service ToolFinder.
Hans Ienasescu and Matúš Kalaš join us to explain how bio.tools uses a community driven, open science model to create this collection of resources and how it makes it easier to find, understand, utilise and cite them. They’ll delve into how bio.tools is using standard semantics (e.g. the EDAM ontology) and syntax (e.g. biotoolsSchema) to enrich the annotation and description of tools and resources. Finally, we’ll see how the community can contribute to bio.tools and take advantage of its key features to share and promote their own research software.
Materials are shared under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International agreement unless otherwise specified and were current at the time of the event.
Files and materials included in this record:
Event metadata (PDF): Information about the event including, description, event URL, learning objectives, prerequisites, technical requirements etc.
Index of training materials (PDF): List and description of all materials associated with this event including the name, format, location and a brief description of each file.
biotools_EDAM_slides (PDF): A PDF copy of the slides presented during the webinar.
Materials shared elsewhere:
A recording of this webinar is available on the Australian BioCommons YouTube Channel:
https://youtu.be/K0J4_bAUG3Y
Melissa Burke (melissa@biocommons.org.au)
Ienasescu, Hans
Kalaš, Matúš (orcid: 0000-0002-1509-4981)
Bioinformatics, Research software, EDAM, Workflows, FAIR
Setting The Scene
Opening Address for the ARDC Skills Summit 2023
This presentation provides a welcome to the ARDC Skills Summit 2023, and includes an outline of the importance of digital research skills to data-enriched research, the value of skills training and highly skilled research workforce to the broader...
Keywords: research, training, skills, training material, ARDC, research data commons, digital research skills agenda
Setting The Scene
https://zenodo.org/records/7710621
https://dresa.org.au/materials/setting-the-scene-8a535906-352b-451e-be82-051b1db4c5de
Opening Address for the ARDC Skills Summit 2023
This presentation provides a welcome to the ARDC Skills Summit 2023, and includes an outline of the importance of digital research skills to data-enriched research, the value of skills training and highly skilled research workforce to the broader economy, and an overview of related ARDC activity.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Russell, Keith (orcid: 0000-0001-5390-2719)
research, training, skills, training material, ARDC, research data commons, digital research skills agenda
ARDC FAIR Data 101 self-guided
FAIR Data 101 v3.0 is a self-guided course covering the FAIR Data principles
The FAIR Data 101 virtual course was designed and delivered by the ARDC Skilled Workforce Program twice in 2020 and has now been reworked as a self-guided course.
The course structure was based on 'FAIR Data in the...
Keywords: training material, FAIR data, video, webinar, activities, quiz, FAIR, research data management
ARDC FAIR Data 101 self-guided
https://zenodo.org/records/5094034
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ardc-fair-data-101-self-guided-2d794a84-f0ff-4e11-a39c-fa8ea481e097
FAIR Data 101 v3.0 is a self-guided course covering the FAIR Data principles
The FAIR Data 101 virtual course was designed and delivered by the ARDC Skilled Workforce Program twice in 2020 and has now been reworked as a self-guided course.
The course structure was based on 'FAIR Data in the Scholarly Communications Lifecycle', run by Natasha Simons at the FORCE11 Scholarly Communications Institute. These training materials are hosted on GitHub.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Stokes, Liz (orcid: 0000-0002-2973-5647)
Liffers, Matthias (orcid: 0000-0002-3639-2080)
Burton, Nichola (orcid: 0000-0003-4470-4846)
Martinez, Paula A. (orcid: 0000-0002-8990-1985)
Simons, Natasha (orcid: 0000-0003-0635-1998)
Russell, Keith (orcid: 0000-0001-5390-2719)
McCafferty, Siobhann (orcid: 0000-0002-2491-0995)
Ferrers, Richard (orcid: 0000-0002-2923-9889)
McEachern, Steve (orcid: 0000-0001-7848-4912)
Barlow, Melanie (orcid: 0000-0002-3956-5784)
Brady, Catherine (orcid: 0000-0002-7919-7592)
Brownlee, Rowan (orcid: 0000-0002-1955-1262)
Honeyman, Tom (orcid: 0000-0001-9448-4023)
Quiroga, Maria del Mar (orcid: 0000-0002-8943-2808)
training material, FAIR data, video, webinar, activities, quiz, FAIR, research data management
OpenCL
Supercomputers make use of accelerators from a variety of different hardware vendors, using devices such as multi-core CPU’s, GPU’s and even FPGA’s. OpenCL is a way for your HPC application to make effective use of heterogeneous computing devices, and to avoid code refactoring for new HPC...
Keywords: supercomputing, Pawsey Supercomputing Centre, CPUs, GPUs, OpenCL, FPGAs
Resource type: activity
OpenCL
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmu61dgAX-aa_lk5fby5PjuS49snHpyYL
https://dresa.org.au/materials/opencl
Supercomputers make use of accelerators from a variety of different hardware vendors, using devices such as multi-core CPU’s, GPU’s and even FPGA’s. OpenCL is a way for your HPC application to make effective use of heterogeneous computing devices, and to avoid code refactoring for new HPC infrastructure.
training@pawsey.org.au
Toby Potter
Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre
Pelagos
Toby Potter
supercomputing, Pawsey Supercomputing Centre, CPUs, GPUs, OpenCL, FPGAs
masters
ecr
researcher
support
HIP Workshop
The Heterogeneous Interface for Portability (HIP) provides a programming framework for harnessing the compute capabilities of multicore processors, such as the MI250X GPU’s on Setonix.
In this course we focus on the essentials of developing HIP applications with a focus on...
Keywords: HIP, supercomputing, Programming, GPUs, MPI, debugging
Resource type: full-course
HIP Workshop
https://support.pawsey.org.au/documentation/display/US/Pawsey+Training+Resources
https://dresa.org.au/materials/hip-workshop
The Heterogeneous Interface for Portability (HIP) provides a programming framework for harnessing the compute capabilities of multicore processors, such as the MI250X GPU’s on Setonix.
In this course we focus on the essentials of developing HIP applications with a focus on supercomputing.
Agenda
- Introduction to HIP and high level features
- How to build and run applications on Setonix with HIP and MPI
- A complete line-by-line walkthrough of a HIP-enabled application
- Tools and techniques for debugging and measuring the performance of HIP applications
training@pawsey.org.au
Pelagos
Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre
HIP, supercomputing, Programming, GPUs, MPI, debugging
C/C++ Refresher
The C++ programming language and its C subset is used extensively in research environments. In particular it is the language utilised in the parallel programming frameworks CUDA, HIP, and OpenCL.
This workshop is designed to equip participants with “Survival C++”, an understanding of the basic...
Keywords: supercomputing, C/C++, Programming
Resource type: activity
C/C++ Refresher
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmu61dgAX-aYsRsejVfwHVhpPU2381Njg
https://dresa.org.au/materials/c-c-refresher
The C++ programming language and its C subset is used extensively in research environments. In particular it is the language utilised in the parallel programming frameworks CUDA, HIP, and OpenCL.
This workshop is designed to equip participants with “Survival C++”, an understanding of the basic syntax, how information is encoded in binary format, and how to compile and debug C++ software.
training@pawsey.org.au
Pelagos
Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre
supercomputing, C/C++, Programming
Setting The Scene
Opening Address for the ARDC Skills Summit 2023
This presentation provides a welcome to the ARDC Skills Summit 2023, and includes an outline of the importance of digital research skills to data-enriched research, the value of skills training and highly skilled research workforce to the broader...
Keywords: research, training, skills, training material, ARDC, research data commons, digital research skills agenda
Setting The Scene
https://zenodo.org/record/7710621
https://dresa.org.au/materials/setting-the-scene
Opening Address for the ARDC Skills Summit 2023
This presentation provides a welcome to the ARDC Skills Summit 2023, and includes an outline of the importance of digital research skills to data-enriched research, the value of skills training and highly skilled research workforce to the broader economy, and an overview of related ARDC activity.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Russell, Keith (orcid: 0000-0001-5390-2719)
research, training, skills, training material, ARDC, research data commons, digital research skills agenda
WEBINAR: bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software’. This webinar took place on 21 June 2022.
Event description
bio.tools provides easy access to essential...
Keywords: Bioinformatics, Research software, EDAM, Workflows, FAIR
WEBINAR: bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software
https://zenodo.org/record/7024050
https://dresa.org.au/materials/webinar-bio-tools-making-it-easier-to-find-understand-and-cite-biological-tools-and-software-9180e32a-f4f5-4993-a90a-a9bfcfafd4f3
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software’. This webinar took place on 21 June 2022.
**Event description**
bio.tools provides easy access to essential scientific and technical information about software, command-line tools, databases and services. It’s backed by ELIXIR, the European Infrastructure for Biological Information, and is being used in Australia to register software (e.g. Galaxy Australia, prokka). It underpins the information provided in the Australian BioCommons discovery service ToolFinder.
Hans Ienasescu and Matúš Kalaš join us to explain how bio.tools uses a community driven, open science model to create this collection of resources and how it makes it easier to find, understand, utilise and cite them. They’ll delve into how bio.tools is using standard semantics (e.g. the EDAM ontology) and syntax (e.g. biotoolsSchema) to enrich the annotation and description of tools and resources. Finally, we’ll see how the community can contribute to bio.tools and take advantage of its key features to share and promote their own research software.
Materials are shared under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International agreement unless otherwise specified and were current at the time of the event.
Files and materials included in this record:
* Event metadata (PDF): Information about the event including, description, event URL, learning objectives, prerequisites, technical requirements etc.
* Index of training materials (PDF): List and description of all materials associated with this event including the name, format, location and a brief description of each file.
* biotools_EDAM_slides (PDF): A PDF copy of the slides presented during the webinar.
Materials shared elsewhere:
A recording of this webinar is available on the Australian BioCommons YouTube Channel:
https://youtu.be/K0J4_bAUG3Y
Melissa Burke (melissa@biocommons.org.au)
Ienasescu, Hans
Kalaš, Matúš (orcid: 0000-0002-1509-4981)
Bioinformatics, Research software, EDAM, Workflows, FAIR
WEBINAR: bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software’. This webinar took place on 21 June 2022.
Event description
bio.tools provides easy access to essential...
Keywords: Bioinformatics, Research software, EDAM, Workflows, FAIR
WEBINAR: bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software
https://zenodo.org/record/6758147
https://dresa.org.au/materials/webinar-bio-tools-making-it-easier-to-find-understand-and-cite-biological-tools-and-software
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘bio.tools - making it easier to find, understand and cite biological tools and software’. This webinar took place on 21 June 2022.
**Event description**
bio.tools provides easy access to essential scientific and technical information about software, command-line tools, databases and services. It’s backed by ELIXIR, the European Infrastructure for Biological Information, and is being used in Australia to register software (e.g. Galaxy Australia, prokka). It underpins the information provided in the Australian BioCommons discovery service ToolFinder.
Hans Ienasescu and Matúš Kalaš join us to explain how bio.tools uses a community driven, open science model to create this collection of resources and how it makes it easier to find, understand, utilise and cite them. They’ll delve into how bio.tools is using standard semantics (e.g. the EDAM ontology) and syntax (e.g. biotoolsSchema) to enrich the annotation and description of tools and resources. Finally, we’ll see how the community can contribute to bio.tools and take advantage of its key features to share and promote their own research software.
Materials are shared under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International agreement unless otherwise specified and were current at the time of the event.
**Files and materials included in this record:**
- Event metadata (PDF): Information about the event including, description, event URL, learning objectives, prerequisites, technical requirements etc.
- Index of training materials (PDF): List and description of all materials associated with this event including the name, format, location and a brief description of each file.
- biotools_EDAM_slides (PDF): A PDF copy of the slides presented during the webinar.
**Materials shared elsewhere:**
A recording of this webinar is available on the Australian BioCommons YouTube Channel:
https://youtu.be/K0J4_bAUG3Y
Melissa Burke (melissa@biocommons.org.au)
Ienasescu, Hans
Kalaš, Matúš (orcid: 0000-0002-1509-4981)
Bioinformatics, Research software, EDAM, Workflows, FAIR
WEBINAR: KBase - A knowledge base for systems biology
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘KBase - A knowledge base for systems biology’. This webinar took place on 22 September 2021.
Event description
Developed for bench biologists and bioinformaticians, The Department of Energy...
Keywords: Systems Biology, FAIR Research, Open Source Software, Metagenomics, Microbiology
WEBINAR: KBase - A knowledge base for systems biology
https://zenodo.org/record/5717580
https://dresa.org.au/materials/webinar-kbase-a-knowledge-base-for-systems-biology
This record includes training materials associated with the Australian BioCommons webinar ‘KBase - A knowledge base for systems biology’. This webinar took place on 22 September 2021.
**Event description**
Developed for bench biologists and bioinformaticians, The Department of Energy Systems Biology Knowledgebase (KBase) is a free, open source, software and data science platform designed to meet the grand challenge of systems biology: predicting and designing biological function.
This webinar will provide an overview of the KBase mission and user community, as well as a tour of the online platform and basic functionality. You’ll learn how KBase can support your research: Upload data, run analysis tools (Apps), share your analysis with collaborators, and publish your data and reproducible workflows. We’ll highlight a brand new feature that enables users to link environment and measurement data to sequencing data. You’ll also find out how KBase supports findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable (FAIR) research by providing open, reproducible, shareable bioinformatics workflows.
Materials are shared under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International agreement unless otherwise specified and were current at the time of the event.
**Files and materials included in this record:**
- Event metadata (PDF): Information about the event including, description, event URL, learning objectives, prerequisites, technical requirements etc.
- Index of training materials (PDF): List and description of all materials associated with this event including the name, format, location and a brief description of each file.
- Q&A for Australian BioCommons KBase Webinar [PDF]: Document containing answers to questions asked during the webinar and links to additional resources
- Introduction to KBase: Australian BioCommons Webinar [PDF]: Slides presented during the webinar
**Materials shared elsewhere:**
A recording of the webinar is available on the Australian BioCommons YouTube Channel:
https://youtu.be/tJ94i9gOJfU
The slides are also available as Google slides:
https://tinyurl.com/KBase-webinar-slides
Melissa Burke (melissa@biocommons.org.au)
Dow, Ellen (orcid: 0000-0002-2079-0260)
Wood-Charlson, Elisha (orcid: 0000-0001-9557-7715)
Systems Biology, FAIR Research, Open Source Software, Metagenomics, Microbiology
ARDC FAIR Data 101 self-guided
FAIR Data 101 v3.0 is a self-guided course covering the FAIR Data principles
The FAIR Data 101 virtual course was designed and delivered by the ARDC Skilled Workforce Program twice in 2020 and has now been reworked as a self-guided course.
The course structure was based on 'FAIR Data in the...
Keywords: training material, FAIR data, video, webinar, activities, quiz, FAIR, research data management
ARDC FAIR Data 101 self-guided
https://zenodo.org/record/5094034
https://dresa.org.au/materials/ardc-fair-data-101-self-guided-bba41a59-8479-4f4f-b9ee-337b9eb294bf
FAIR Data 101 v3.0 is a self-guided course covering the FAIR Data principles
The FAIR Data 101 virtual course was designed and delivered by the ARDC Skilled Workforce Program twice in 2020 and has now been reworked as a self-guided course.
The course structure was based on 'FAIR Data in the Scholarly Communications Lifecycle', run by Natasha Simons at the FORCE11 Scholarly Communications Institute. These training materials are hosted on GitHub.
contact@ardc.edu.au
Stokes, Liz (orcid: 0000-0002-2973-5647)
Liffers, Matthias (orcid: 0000-0002-3639-2080)
Burton, Nichola (orcid: 0000-0003-4470-4846)
Martinez, Paula A. (orcid: 0000-0002-8990-1985)
Simons, Natasha (orcid: 0000-0003-0635-1998)
Russell, Keith (orcid: 0000-0001-5390-2719)
McCafferty, Siobhann (orcid: 0000-0002-2491-0995)
Ferrers, Richard (orcid: 0000-0002-2923-9889)
McEachern, Steve (orcid: 0000-0001-7848-4912)
Barlow, Melanie (orcid: 0000-0002-3956-5784)
Brady, Catherine (orcid: 0000-0002-7919-7592)
Brownlee, Rowan (orcid: 0000-0002-1955-1262)
Honeyman, Tom (orcid: 0000-0001-9448-4023)
Quiroga, Maria del Mar (orcid: 0000-0002-8943-2808)
training material, FAIR data, video, webinar, activities, quiz, FAIR, research data management