« previous: Pony Rides | next: A Poll »
Perl and Genomics
Perl is man’s best friend. Well, maybe not, but it’s my best friend, anyway. Using Perl, I’ve been able to:
♠ make a computer-based car stereo that has all my CDs copied onto its hard drive, so every song, band, and album is instantly available all the time. (Well, I don’t quite have all my CDs copied onto it yet -- only about 250 or 300 so far. It takes time, you know...)
♣ make the scripts that run this website, like the blogger/messageboard script you’re reading right now, along with a login script, a mailinglist script, my visitorlog/stats scripts, and various others.
♥ make an interface for creating webpages from photos that’s easy enough for my mom to use, along with the scripts to display those photos as a slideshow or in frames (and the blog/msgboard script fits in to allow user comments on the photos).
And now, I just started a job using Perl (along with other web-development concepts like CGI programming, CSS design, mysql databases, etc) to help design/maintain a database and website system in one of the bio labs here on campus. Professors and grad students here are collaborating with people at Cornell and the U of Florida on a project to sequence flower genomes, and Perl plays a big role in enabling the project.
Most of the bio is mostly over my head, but I’m learning it as I go. Genomics is certainly interesting stuff, especially with stories about the supposed successful creation of a human clone making the news nowadays. And while I’m working, I get to hear the researchers make jokes about the "millions of years of evolution" these plants have gone through (well, they don’t know that they are jokes... but they’re funny).
Comments:
Reply to this message here:
[ Home – Create Post – Archives – Login – CMS by Encodable ]