Hopefully it's back after the weekend π€
But you might want to check out SequenceServer - we're a reliable and intuitive way of running NCBI BLAST (and more)
(much easier than working things in the command-line!)
Hopefully it's back after the weekend π€
But you might want to check out SequenceServer - we're a reliable and intuitive way of running NCBI BLAST (and more)
(much easier than working things in the command-line!)
Hopefully back after the weekend π€
In the meantime, SequenceServer is a reliable alternative to run NCBI BLAST (and more).
Hopefully NCBI is back on Monday.
But FYI - SequenceServer is much easier to run than local BLAST.
(we created it 10+ years ago to BLAST faster, get prettier graphs, and improve collaboration; it now does a ton of other things too)
Not really - our infrastructure is completely independent of NCBI/NIH.
But some analyses do use copies of NCBI-consolidated data.
If, for example, NIH were to stop updating NR, then European/Japanese/Chinese sister orgs would need to take the lead.
But e.g., SwissProt is made... in Switzerland
Hopefully it's just a temporary hiccup π€
FYI, our SequenceServer tool provides a reliable alternative way to run NCBI BLAST (and more).
(we created it 10+ years ago to BLAST unpublished data, collaborate better, and get genomics done faster; it does a bunch more now too)
Hopefully NCBI services will be back after the weekend π€
In the meantime, SequenceServer reliably enables you to run NCBI BLAST (and do much more) fast, anytime, and without queues.
Hopefully NCBI services will be back after the weekend π€
In the meantime, SequenceServer reliably enables you to run NCBI BLAST (and do much more) fast, anytime, and without queues.
(we created it 10+ years ago to blast fast, and collaborate and intepret better)
Frustrating.
hopefully NIH will recover after the weekend π€
As a backup, our sequenceserver.com lets you run NCBI BLAST anytime - many PIs have an instance for their team.
(we created it to BLAST unpublished data, get prettier graphics that help interpretation, and improve collaboration)
You might also want to have a look at our BLAST interface.
It's designed to be more intuitive
We're hoping the NCBI/NIH will be able to recover.
As a failsafe or backup, our sequenceserver.com lets you BLAST anything you want (and does it fast and with beautiful graphics that make interpretation easier).
Beautiful!
Hello friend!
It happens...
As a failsafe or backup, our sequenceserver.com tool lets you BLAST anything you want (and does it fast and with beautiful graphics that make interpretation easier). It has a trackrecord 100% uptime too...
We're hoping the NCBI/NIH will be able to recover.
As a failsafe or backup, our sequenceserver.com lets you BLAST anything you want (and does it fast and with beautiful graphics that make interpretation easier).
We're hoping for the best...
But FYI sequenceserver.com is a reliable failsafe for BLAST-ing and genome browsing and more. |
(your lab or institute gets a private server to BLAST fast and with great graphics that facilitate interpretation)
Hiya @spicybotrytis.bsky.social - you might like our seequenceserver.com tool. Upload any FASTA file as a database, then BLAST search with a an intuitive interface (lots of graphs that help with gene annotation issues - including the attached which shows length of query vs lengths of all hits)
We very much hope that NCBI manage to pull things together.
But FWIW, our sequenceserver.com can be a dependable fallback - itβs a paid service giving your lab a private BLAST server. Itβs been a lifesaver for labs that want reliable, fast BLAST with intuitive graphics (for standard or custom dbs).
We very much hope that NCBI manage to pull things together.
But FWIW, our sequenceserver.com can be a dependable fallback. Itβs a paid service giving your lab a private BLAST server. Itβs been a lifesaver for labs that want reliable, fast BLAST with intuitive graphics (for standard or custom dbs).
I very much hope that NCBI remains unchanged.
But FYI: if you need a dependable fallback when NCBI BLAST is down, our sequenceserver.com is worth a look. Itβs a paid service giving your lab a private BLAST server. Itβs been a lifesaver for labs that want reliable, fast BLAST with great graphics.
Check out the paper here: doi.org/10.3390/biom...
Happy BLASTing!
The seasonβs most romantic meet-cute mystery, how do gametes released into the environment recognize their own #species?π€ New #research reveals #proteins on the unfertilized eggs might be keyβat least in ribbon worms!πͺ±
π Congrats to the authors! Linkπ
#science #marine #genetics #bioinformatics
Those technical hurdles while trying to answer a biological question are so frustrating.
What are you trying to do?
We created sequenceserver.com to enable researchers to focus on the biology. And >4 million metazoan COX1 sequences 𧬠are preloaded for fast point-and-click BLAST.
#genomics
You're right - Genome analysis is hard enough as it is - no need for email obstacle courses!
SequenceServer keeps your inbox as clean as you want your DNA sequences to be. π§¬
#genomics #bioinformatics
Check out the paper here: doi.org/10.1093/data...
And the database here: reefgenomics.org
Happy BLASTing!
Will we ever stop celebrating #databases? Not likely! They offer high-quality #datasets to scientists worldwide.
Perfect example: Reefgenomics(.Org)πͺΈ Published in 2016, this #BLASTfromthePast is still being updated with #coral #genomes today! We're proud to be a part!
Linksπ
#reef #marinescience
Check out the paper here: doi.org/10.1186/s128...
Youβve heard of blue-blooded, but that pales (literally) in comparison to white-blooded icefishes π, the only #vertebrates without #hemoglobin! π©Έ Shin et al., (with help from #SequenceServer!) reveal that #gene loss may be to blame. Congrats to the authors! π
Linkπ
#genomics
You can find the paper here! doi.org/10.1101/2024...
Thanks to new #research on gars & bowfins, the evolution of #vertebrate #immune surveillance just got more garbledπTurns out these #fish have their own PSMB8 types, completely unique among vertebrates! Fascinating! π§¬
Congrats to the authors! Glad #SequenceServer could help!
Check out the paper π
Check out the paper here: doi.org/10.1093/data...