Events/Scotland meetup

From 2008.igem.org

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(New page: There was a UK meetup even on Saturday July 19th. Those who attended will be adding more details soon.)
 
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There was a UK meetup even on Saturday July 19thThose who attended will be adding more details soon.
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== '''iGEM-UK Shindig, 15/16th July 2008''' ==
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[[Image:Group-photo.jpg|400px|thumb|right|Taken at 5pm - should have seen them at 1am...]]
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(Hosted at the University of Edinburgh)
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All the UK iGEM teams were invited to a wee get-together in Edinburgh to share experiences, trials, tribulations, best-practise ''and'' a few beers!    Or a few more than a few... whose idea was the vodka bar?
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''Matthieu - Bubble-gum flavour vodka is just wrong on so many levels, seriously.''
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Anyway here's a picture of the teams '''before''' they went on a brain cell killing spree.
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== THE SERIOUS BUSINESS 15th July ==
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[http://www.leagueagainsttedium.co.uk Simon Munnery], comedian,
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"The engineering equivalent of Genetic Engineering is to get a bunch of concrete and steel, throw it into a river, and if you can walk across it, call it a bridge."
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With this in mind we kicked off with an ice-breaker team-builder where we mixed up folks from the 5 different institutions ([[Team:BCCS-Bristol|Bristol]], [[Team:Cambridge|Cambridge]], [[Team:Edinburgh|Edinburgh]], [[Team:Imperial_College|Imperial]] and [[Team:Newcastle University|Newcastle]]) into 6 teams to compete against each other to build bridges made from popsicle sticks. The strongest bridge won a drinkable prize - my idea so I guess I should take some of the blame from the descent experienced that evening...
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It was all a bit of fun but it did have a underlying motivation: The teams should have learned the importance of doing proper design / brainstorming prior to building and that having a good skills mix within the team was important. NOT sure it ran exactly along those lines...
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There were a clutch of teams which held over 3kg of weight but the winning team was "iGEM Log".Thanks to [http://www.see.ed.ac.uk Dr Andrew Firth] for his help in running this activity. On the
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[[16th July]] we had a day of ''actual'' work.
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[[Image:Heads-down.jpg|400px|thumb|right|Down to the serious business of engineering]]
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[[Image:The-contenders.jpg|400px|thumb|left|Rogues gallery - be thankful those iGEMers are not going anywhere near bridges. Let it be noted, however, that the three bridges in the foreground were the strongest. iGEM Log, to the right, won the contest.]]
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[[Image:Bendy-bridge.jpg|400px|thumb|right|I wouldn't walk across this kind of bridge!]]
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[[Image:girders.jpg|400px|thumb|left|A better design but not the strongest.]]

Latest revision as of 15:27, 19 August 2008

iGEM-UK Shindig, 15/16th July 2008

Taken at 5pm - should have seen them at 1am...

(Hosted at the University of Edinburgh)

All the UK iGEM teams were invited to a wee get-together in Edinburgh to share experiences, trials, tribulations, best-practise and a few beers! Or a few more than a few... whose idea was the vodka bar?

Matthieu - Bubble-gum flavour vodka is just wrong on so many levels, seriously.

Anyway here's a picture of the teams before they went on a brain cell killing spree.

THE SERIOUS BUSINESS 15th July

[http://www.leagueagainsttedium.co.uk Simon Munnery], comedian, "The engineering equivalent of Genetic Engineering is to get a bunch of concrete and steel, throw it into a river, and if you can walk across it, call it a bridge."

With this in mind we kicked off with an ice-breaker team-builder where we mixed up folks from the 5 different institutions (Bristol, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Imperial and Newcastle) into 6 teams to compete against each other to build bridges made from popsicle sticks. The strongest bridge won a drinkable prize - my idea so I guess I should take some of the blame from the descent experienced that evening... It was all a bit of fun but it did have a underlying motivation: The teams should have learned the importance of doing proper design / brainstorming prior to building and that having a good skills mix within the team was important. NOT sure it ran exactly along those lines...

There were a clutch of teams which held over 3kg of weight but the winning team was "iGEM Log".Thanks to [http://www.see.ed.ac.uk Dr Andrew Firth] for his help in running this activity. On the 16th July we had a day of actual work.

Down to the serious business of engineering
Rogues gallery - be thankful those iGEMers are not going anywhere near bridges. Let it be noted, however, that the three bridges in the foreground were the strongest. iGEM Log, to the right, won the contest.
I wouldn't walk across this kind of bridge!
A better design but not the strongest.