Team:UC Berkeley Tools/Notebook/Nade's Notebook
From 2008.igem.org
This is the notebook of Nade Sritanyaratana. I got involved in iGEM through word of my instructor. I am a 4th year undergraduate at UC Berkeley in Bioengineering with a concentration in imaging, and I hope to attend a PhD graduate program in the upcoming year. My prior research experience consists of working with bioengineering professor Steven Conolly in the summer and fall of 2007. Beyond imaging, my academic interests include biomechanics; signals and systems; circuit analysis; systems biology; and linear optimization.
Now that iGEM is over, my new role as a part of Dr. Douglas Densmore's lab is to solidify the tool, iron out any bugs, and make the Clotho Parts Manager user-customizable. My team roles during iGEM can be found here.
EDIT: As of after iGEM and the start of Spring 2009, the purpose of this notebook has now changed.
Contents |
Personal Info
Name: Nade Sritanyaratana
Position: Team member, UC_Berkeley_Tools
Supervisor: Doug Densmore
Lab coworkers: Matthew Johnson, Anne Van Devender
Contact: Nadesri@berkeley.edu
Log
iGEM Stuff
Click here to access my old bio, archived iGEM logs, and my old wiki how-to.
January 8, 2009: This notebook's new purpose
For some time now, I have misplaced my iGEM (paper) notebook. I realize getting another notebook may only end up with me losing it once again. So I hereby declare that all my thoughts will go here, on my WIKI notebook.
The first thing I need to do is figure out this xml deal to give the parts manager more flexibility.
The second thing I must do it reconstruct what Anderson and Josh wanted me to do with the Parts Manager. I forgot their entire scheme with ctrl+click, shift+click, etc. I'll hold a meeting with them to do this.
That's all that comes to mind right now. Hopefully I finish the xml deal by the 15th. I'll keep posted.
January 14, 2009: Meeting with Doug. Archival. XML developments.
Short talk. Met with Doug today, back from Columbia. Has vision about plan for Spring semester with circular flow. Will talk about it on Friday with rest of team. Cleaned up my notebook; old entries are now on different page, changed up bio to better fit new semester. Now know how to write XML, validate XML documents, make a DTD, write XML documents via Java. Have to learn how to read XML via Java, which includes learning about different XML parsers. Do I sound like Rorschach? Hurmm.
I've decided. I'm going to use the SAX2 API, and the Xerces parser.