
BIOME News
Paula Manning reports on recent
developments within BIOME, the health and life sciences hub of the
Resource Discovery Network (RDN).

BIOME and Bananas
We were delighted that, despite terrible weather
and transport conditions, many people attended the official launch of the
BIOME Service at The Royal Society on 2nd November. Some interesting facts
were presented at the launch. In addition to an introduction to our new
Service,
http://biome.ac.uk/ by Karen Stanton,
Director of Information Services at Nottingham University, delegates were
informed that not only were they 98 percent related to chimps, but that
their genes show 60 percent similarity to bananas! We were presented with
these facts during an entertaining talk by Professor Steve Jones, renowned
geneticist and author, who illustrated the importance of the internet in
scientific research, especially with regard to dissemination of sequence
data such as that obtained from the human genome project. Michael Wills,
Minister for Learning and Technology gave the key note speech, presenting
his vision of the developing role of the Internet in the delivery and
support of education and knowledge and Dr Denis Blight , Director General of
CAB International spoke about information management within the agricultural
and veterinary sectors. The afternoon session of the launch consisted of
workshops aligned with the subject areas of the five BIOME gateways and we
are extremely grateful for the valuable input from participants. The
comments and suggestions provided will play an important part in our
development planning.
Posters and A5 leaflets are now available, both for BIOME and for each
of the five subject-specific gateways (OMNI, Vetgate, BioResearch, Natural
Selection and AgriFor) within the BIOME Service. To request copies, please
email Jenny Hall at jh@biome.ac.uk.
Looking Ahead...
Looking forward to the New Year, BIOME will be
proto-typing new services as part of the Resource Discovery Network, Subject
Portals Development Project. Facilities such as cross searching other
information sources, and community services will be explored and tested. The
Project is funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC) under
the 5/99 call for proposals and forms part of the programme to deliver the
Distributed National Electronic Resource [1] for the further and higher
education and research communities.
References (as below)
- The Distributed National Electronic Resource Home page is at:
http://www.jisc.ac.uk/dner/
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