Interoperability with Moby 1.0--it's better than sharing your toothbrush!. Wilkinson, M., D., Senger, M., Kawas, E., Bruskiewich, R., Gouzy, J., Noirot, C., Bardou, P., Ng, A., Haase, D., Saiz, E., d., A., Wang, D., Gibbons, F., Gordon, P., M., K., Sensen, C., W., Carrasco, J., M., R., Fernández, J., M., Shen, L., Links, M., Ng, M., Opushneva, N., Neerincx, P., B., T., Leunissen, J., A., M., Ernst, R., Twigger, S., Usadel, B., Good, B., Wong, Y., Stein, L., Crosby, W., Karlsson, J., Royo, R., Párraga, I., Ramírez, S., Gelpi, J., L., Trelles, O., Pisano, D., G., Jimenez, N., Kerhornou, A., Rosset, R., Zamacola, L., Tarraga, J., Huerta-Cepas, J., Carazo, J., M., Dopazo, J., Guigo, R., Navarro, A., Orozco, M., Valencia, A., Claros, M., G., Pérez, A., J., Aldana, J., Rojano, M., M., Fernandez-Santa Cruz, R., Navas, I., Schiltz, G., Farmer, A., Gessler, D., Schoof, H., & Groscurth, A. Briefings in bioinformatics, 9(3):220-31, 5, 2008.
Interoperability with Moby 1.0--it's better than sharing your toothbrush! [link]Website  doi  abstract   bibtex   
The BioMoby project was initiated in 2001 from within the model organism database community. It aimed to standardize methodologies to facilitate information exchange and access to analytical resources, using a consensus driven approach. Six years later, the BioMoby development community is pleased to announce the release of the 1.0 version of the interoperability framework, registry Application Programming Interface and supporting Perl and Java code-bases. Together, these provide interoperable access to over 1400 bioinformatics resources worldwide through the BioMoby platform, and this number continues to grow. Here we highlight and discuss the features of BioMoby that make it distinct from other Semantic Web Service and interoperability initiatives, and that have been instrumental to its deployment and use by a wide community of bioinformatics service providers. The standard, client software, and supporting code libraries are all freely available at http://www.biomoby.org/.
@article{
 title = {Interoperability with Moby 1.0--it's better than sharing your toothbrush!},
 type = {article},
 year = {2008},
 keywords = {Computational Biology,Computational Biology: methods,Database Management Systems,Databases,Factual,Information Storage and Retrieval,Information Storage and Retrieval: methods,Internet,Programming Languages,Systems Integration},
 pages = {220-31},
 volume = {9},
 websites = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18238804},
 month = {5},
 id = {71d6e1bc-7dd3-346d-b61a-5ee54fcb5e81},
 created = {2014-07-02T09:11:39.000Z},
 accessed = {2013-02-27},
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 last_modified = {2017-03-22T07:45:59.566Z},
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 citation_key = {Wilkinson2008},
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 abstract = {The BioMoby project was initiated in 2001 from within the model organism database community. It aimed to standardize methodologies to facilitate information exchange and access to analytical resources, using a consensus driven approach. Six years later, the BioMoby development community is pleased to announce the release of the 1.0 version of the interoperability framework, registry Application Programming Interface and supporting Perl and Java code-bases. Together, these provide interoperable access to over 1400 bioinformatics resources worldwide through the BioMoby platform, and this number continues to grow. Here we highlight and discuss the features of BioMoby that make it distinct from other Semantic Web Service and interoperability initiatives, and that have been instrumental to its deployment and use by a wide community of bioinformatics service providers. The standard, client software, and supporting code libraries are all freely available at http://www.biomoby.org/.},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Wilkinson, Mark D and Senger, Martin and Kawas, Edward and Bruskiewich, Richard and Gouzy, Jerome and Noirot, Celine and Bardou, Philippe and Ng, Ambrose and Haase, Dirk and Saiz, Enrique de Andres and Wang, Dennis and Gibbons, Frank and Gordon, Paul M K and Sensen, Christoph W and Carrasco, Jose Manuel Rodriguez and Fernández, José M and Shen, Lixin and Links, Matthew and Ng, Michael and Opushneva, Nina and Neerincx, Pieter B T and Leunissen, Jack A M and Ernst, Rebecca and Twigger, Simon and Usadel, Bjorn and Good, Benjamin and Wong, Yan and Stein, Lincoln and Crosby, William and Karlsson, Johan and Royo, Romina and Párraga, Iván and Ramírez, Sergio and Gelpi, Josep Lluis and Trelles, Oswaldo and Pisano, David G and Jimenez, Natalia and Kerhornou, Arnaud and Rosset, Roman and Zamacola, Leire and Tarraga, Joaquin and Huerta-Cepas, Jaime and Carazo, Jose María and Dopazo, Joaquin and Guigo, Roderic and Navarro, Arcadi and Orozco, Modesto and Valencia, Alfonso and Claros, M Gonzalo and Pérez, Antonio J and Aldana, Jose and Rojano, M Mar and Fernandez-Santa Cruz, Raul and Navas, Ismael and Schiltz, Gary and Farmer, Andrew and Gessler, Damian and Schoof, Heiko and Groscurth, Andreas},
 doi = {10.1093/bib/bbn003},
 journal = {Briefings in bioinformatics},
 number = {3}
}

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