Difference between revisions of "Team:Exeter/Collaborations"

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<h2> Collaborations</h2>
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<h3>Collaboration:</h3>
Sharing and collaboration are core values of iGEM. We encourage you to reach out and work with other teams on difficult problems that you can more easily solve together.
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<p>Throughout iGEM, we have communicated with a great many other teams via twitter and facebook, and a few through Skype.</p>
  
<h4> Which other teams can we work with? </h4>
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<p>We have corresponded with the Bielefeld iGEM team[link] via email and Skype as, like our team, Bielefeld are focusing on cell-free systems as part of their project. Their team managed to build their own cell-free kit - quite a feat - which we volunteered to test with our toehold switch. We also had some early discussions regarding chromoproteins.</p>
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You can work with any other team in the competition, including software, hardware, high school and other tracks. You can also work with non-iGEM research groups, but they do not count towards the <a hreef="https://2015.igem.org/Judging/Awards#Medals">iGEM team collaboration gold medal criterion</a>.
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<p>The Oxford iGEM team[link] also got in contact to discuss stochastic modelling and simulations with our modelling team. We exchanged information on our project, finding Oxford’s gene expression model particularly impressive.</p>
In order to meet the gold medal criteria on helping another team, you must complete this page and detail the nature of your collaboration with another iGEM team.
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<p>Another group we contacted was the Manchester-Graz iGEM team[link], a merge of two groups of students from the UK and Austria. We Skyped their team and discussed chromoproteins and a survey they are undertaking.</p>
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<p>We provided an article for the iGEM newsletter Amoy[link] are organising. This can be viewed here[link].</p>
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<p>We attended the UK iGEM meetup, hosted and organised by Westminster iGEM[link].</p>
  
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<p>A highlight of our iGEM collaboration was the group skype we hosted. Seven teams were involved, although ultimately we were plagued with technical issues and ended up in a smaller Skype call. Thanks to the teams we spoke with: Sydney[link], Manchester-Graz[link], and Warwick[link].</p>
Here are some suggestions for projects you could work on with other teams:
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<p>We took part in Kent iGEM team’s[link] survey on nanowires, bioreactors, and renewable energy, and we hope that the data we provided will be useful to them.</p>
<li> Improve the function of another team's BioBrick Part or Device</li>
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<li> Characterize another team's part </li>
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<li> Debug a construct </li>
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<li> Model or simulating another team's system </li>
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<li> Test another team's software</li>
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<li> Help build and test another team's hardware project</li>
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<li> Mentor a high-school team</li>
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<p>nait edmonton policies and practices (both new application) interview about our project.</p>
  
  
 
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Revision as of 12:53, 7 September 2015

Collaboration:

Throughout iGEM, we have communicated with a great many other teams via twitter and facebook, and a few through Skype.

We have corresponded with the Bielefeld iGEM team[link] via email and Skype as, like our team, Bielefeld are focusing on cell-free systems as part of their project. Their team managed to build their own cell-free kit - quite a feat - which we volunteered to test with our toehold switch. We also had some early discussions regarding chromoproteins.

The Oxford iGEM team[link] also got in contact to discuss stochastic modelling and simulations with our modelling team. We exchanged information on our project, finding Oxford’s gene expression model particularly impressive.

Another group we contacted was the Manchester-Graz iGEM team[link], a merge of two groups of students from the UK and Austria. We Skyped their team and discussed chromoproteins and a survey they are undertaking.

We provided an article for the iGEM newsletter Amoy[link] are organising. This can be viewed here[link].

We attended the UK iGEM meetup, hosted and organised by Westminster iGEM[link].

A highlight of our iGEM collaboration was the group skype we hosted. Seven teams were involved, although ultimately we were plagued with technical issues and ended up in a smaller Skype call. Thanks to the teams we spoke with: Sydney[link], Manchester-Graz[link], and Warwick[link].

We took part in Kent iGEM team’s[link] survey on nanowires, bioreactors, and renewable energy, and we hope that the data we provided will be useful to them.

nait edmonton policies and practices (both new application) interview about our project.

  • Contact us:
    exeterigem@gmail.com