Difference between revisions of "Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Parts"

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  <div class="text1">COMMUNITY</div>
 
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<a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Community">Overview</a><br>
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        <a style="text-decoration: underline" href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Parts">Parts</a><br>
 
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        <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Interlab">Interlab</a><br>
<h1>Parts</h1>
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        <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Collaborations">Collaborations</a>
 
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<p>Each team will make new parts during iGEM and will submit them to the Registry of Standard Biological Parts. The iGEM software provides an easy way to present the parts your team has created. The <code>&lt;groupparts&gt;</code> tag (see below) will generate a table with all of the parts that your team adds to your team sandbox.</p>
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<p>Remember that the goal of proper part documentation is to describe and define a part, so that it can be used without needing to refer to the primary literature. Registry users in future years should be able to read your documentation and be able to use the part successfully. Also, you should provide proper references to acknowledge previous authors and to provide for users who wish to know more.</p>
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<h3 style="color: #CC6633">Parts</h3>
 
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We all are in this together! With a combined effort, we can make a positive impact on our planet and on the people and other species that we share it with. The “Community” section of our wiki is about cooperative practices, such as creating and characterizing BioBrick Parts for the Registry, contributing to standardization of methods by taking part in the Interlab Study and collaboration with other iGEM teams. What is unique to iGEM, collaborations can also focus on human practices and other collaborative efforts that benefit the community, as is the case with many of our collaborations.
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<h5>Note</h5>
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<p>Note that parts must be documented on the <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Main_Page"> Registry</a>. This page serves to <i>showcase</i> the parts you have made. Future teams and other users and are much more likely to find parts by looking in the Registry than by looking at your team wiki.</p>
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<h5>Adding parts to the registry</h5>
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<p>You can add parts to the Registry at our <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Add_a_Part_to_the_Registry">Add a Part to the Registry</a> link.</p>
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<p>We encourage teams to start completing documentation for their parts on the Registry as soon as you have it available. The sooner you put up your parts, the better you will remember all the details about your parts. Remember, you don't need to send us the DNA sample before you create an entry for a part on the Registry. (However, you <b>do</b> need to send us the DNA sample before the Jamboree. If you don't send us a DNA sample of a part, that part will not be eligible for awards and medal criteria.)</p>
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<h4>Conferences</h4>
 
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Before going to the Giant Jamboree in Boston we attended two iGEM conferences: <b>Nordic iGEM Conference</b> (NiC) in Copenhagen (Denmark) 9.-11.6.2017 and <b>European iGEM Meetup</b> in Delft (the Netherlands) 7.-8.7.2017. Both conferences proved to be very useful in preparing for the actual Jamboree, making contacts and especially in familiarizing ourselves with countless other projects! As a bonus, we were given a few very interesting lectures on current research topics and on science journalism.
 
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<h5>What information do I need to start putting my parts on the Registry?</h5>
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<p>The information needed to initially create a part on the Registry is:</p>
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At the Nordic iGEM Conference the program included a presentation by one of the previous year’s iGEM teams (Cosmo crops) with a Q&A session, three workshops mostly focusing on ethics, feedback and communicating science to the outside world, as well as networking and a Boston-style PowerPoint presentation to the judges and the audience. Feedback from the presentation and our idea helped to shape our project to its final form, while we also gained some valuable experience on presenting. We even got a special mention from the judges for having a clear and visually appealing presentation!
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<li>Part Name</li>
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<li>Part type</li>
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Picture from NiC.
<li>Creator</li>
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</p>
<li>Sequence</li>
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<li>Short Description (60 characters on what the DNA does)</li>
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There was no PowerPoint presentation during European iGEM Meetup, but instead a poster session. We had prepared our own poster and had a chance to present it to the other teams and get their input to our project while practicing presenting a scientific poster. We had a chance to listen to presentations by Cees Dekker, Denis Murphy and Dirk Stemerding, who surely gave us a lot to think about, regarding the current state of the art and ethical questions. Nevertheless, the most important outcome from both of these conferences were the people we met and befriended with while discussing synthetic biology, iGEM and saving the world in general.
<li>Long Description (Longer description of what the DNA does)</li>
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<li>Design considerations</li>
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Picture from EiC / poster / something.
 
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We encourage you to put up <em>much more</em> information as you gather it over the summer. If you have images, plots, characterization data and other information, please also put it up on the part page. </p>
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<h5>Inspiration</h5>
 
<p>We have a created  a <a href="http://parts.igem.org/Well_Documented_Parts">collection of well documented parts</a> that can help you get started.</p>
 
 
<p> You can also take a look at how other teams have documented their parts in their wiki:</p>
 
<ul>
 
<li><a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:MIT/Parts"> 2014 MIT </a></li>
 
<li><a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Heidelberg/Parts"> 2014 Heidelberg</a></li>
 
<li><a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:Tokyo_Tech/Parts">2014 Tokyo Tech</a></li>
 
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<h5>Part Table </h5>
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<p>Please include a table of all the parts your team has made during your project on this page. Remember part characterization and measurement data must go on your team part pages on the Registry. </p>
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                        <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Aalto-Helsinki">HOME</a>
 
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                        <a href="http://www.aalto.fi/en/">AALTO UNIVERSITY</a>
 
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                        <a href="http://www.aaltohelsinki.com/2017/index.html"><img class="some" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/f/f1/T--Aalto-Helsinki--home_icon.png"></a>
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                        <li><a href="https://www.facebook.com/AaltoHelsinki/"><i class="pe-so-facebook pe-hover pe-2x"></i></a></li>
<groupparts>iGEM17 Aalto-Helsinki</groupparts>
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                        <li><a href="https://twitter.com/aaltohelsinki?lang=en"><i class="pe-so-twitter pe-hover pe-2x"></i></a></li>
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                        <li><a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company-beta/16253263/"><i class="pe-so-linkedin pe-hover pe-2x"></i></a></li>
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                        <a href="https://www.helsinki.fi/en">UNIVERSITY OF HELSINKI</a>
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                        <a href="https://2017.igem.org/Team:Aalto-Helsinki/Map">SITE MAP</a>
 
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Revision as of 11:58, 23 October 2017

Aalto-Helsinki



Parts

We all are in this together! With a combined effort, we can make a positive impact on our planet and on the people and other species that we share it with. The “Community” section of our wiki is about cooperative practices, such as creating and characterizing BioBrick Parts for the Registry, contributing to standardization of methods by taking part in the Interlab Study and collaboration with other iGEM teams. What is unique to iGEM, collaborations can also focus on human practices and other collaborative efforts that benefit the community, as is the case with many of our collaborations.

This is a shorter quote. Let us see how it looks.
Short people have short quotes

Conferences

Before going to the Giant Jamboree in Boston we attended two iGEM conferences: Nordic iGEM Conference (NiC) in Copenhagen (Denmark) 9.-11.6.2017 and European iGEM Meetup in Delft (the Netherlands) 7.-8.7.2017. Both conferences proved to be very useful in preparing for the actual Jamboree, making contacts and especially in familiarizing ourselves with countless other projects! As a bonus, we were given a few very interesting lectures on current research topics and on science journalism.

At the Nordic iGEM Conference the program included a presentation by one of the previous year’s iGEM teams (Cosmo crops) with a Q&A session, three workshops mostly focusing on ethics, feedback and communicating science to the outside world, as well as networking and a Boston-style PowerPoint presentation to the judges and the audience. Feedback from the presentation and our idea helped to shape our project to its final form, while we also gained some valuable experience on presenting. We even got a special mention from the judges for having a clear and visually appealing presentation!

Picture from NiC.

There was no PowerPoint presentation during European iGEM Meetup, but instead a poster session. We had prepared our own poster and had a chance to present it to the other teams and get their input to our project while practicing presenting a scientific poster. We had a chance to listen to presentations by Cees Dekker, Denis Murphy and Dirk Stemerding, who surely gave us a lot to think about, regarding the current state of the art and ethical questions. Nevertheless, the most important outcome from both of these conferences were the people we met and befriended with while discussing synthetic biology, iGEM and saving the world in general.

Picture from EiC / poster / something.