Eck and Dayhoff 1966. An early bioinformatics paper, and the introduction of the one-letter amino acid code. In @sciencemagazine. http://science.sciencemag.org/content/152/3720/363.long …pic.twitter.com/tb2CsVnoVr
U tweetove putem weba ili aplikacija drugih proizvođača možete dodati podatke o lokaciji, kao što su grad ili točna lokacija. Povijest lokacija tweetova uvijek možete izbrisati. Saznajte više
Cites work earlier in the year by Eck which does something somewhat like bioinformatics using actual physical pieces of paper! And machines that could sort them automatically using punched holes. Not really computers though. http://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/X328.84 … https://www.nature.com/articles/193241a0 … ($)pic.twitter.com/mXsevZGaAM
So if you want to trace bioinformatics back to the beginning, you have to start with Margaret Dayhoff. She published the first bioinformatics papers, and imbued the field with a culture of sharing data. David Lipman called her "the mother and father of bioinformatics."
Do biological simulations count as bioinformatics?
A biological simulation is not automatically bioinformatics, no.
This is also a nice opportunity to show how computers used to look like at that time http://goo.gl/y2NPKm
What a wonderful way to publish code! I feel this is how methods should be published today too! (Although with the source code available too of course). Way too much running of black boxes in science today, IMO.
Twitter je možda preopterećen ili ima kratkotrajnih poteškoća u radu. Pokušajte ponovno ili potražite dodatne informacije u odjeljku Status Twittera.