This is a two-part question, so bear with me!
I work on Knowledgeblog which is a lightweight publication system for scientific code, data, and results based around WordPress and extended by an ecosystem of off-the-shelf and custom plugins.
We're currently putting together a 'writeathon' to provide some bioinformatics tutorial material on a Knowledgeblog. What topics do people think would be good to cover?
We're looking for tutorials that might be good for all levels - computer scientists interested in learning some biology, biologists getting interested in bioinformatics, and of course tutorials aimed at bioinformaticians by bioinformaticians.
The second part of the question is more of a call to arms. We have a travel budget, and would be happy to spend some of this encouraging people to come to Newcastle for a day (Tuesday 21st June) to write away with us. Obviously this is more likely to occur if you're in the UK, but close international travel could also be supported in a limited number of cases.
All tutorials will be given a citable DOI, and no promises, but we will go for PubMed inclusion if we get enough content. You could also contribute remotely on the day, should travel be impossible but you still want to get some content up!
Suggestions for tutorial topics under this question would be great, votes will allow us to work out what topics we cover and who we invite! If you're interested in joining us in Newcastle at the end of June then please drop me an email directly (d.c.swan@ncl.ac.uk).
For examples of existing Knowledgeblogs you can have a look at Ontogenesis and Taverna kblogs.
community wiki ?
Will authors be able to edit the tutorials after the review?
Good initiative and best of luck! To add to Jan's question: will authors be able to edit tutorials that they have not written themselves? This is vital IMHO.
Jan, very good question - the question of whether an article is canonical is important. The way we work this right now is that if new versions are edited, the old versions remain on the site, linked to at the bottom of the article.
Michael, it doesn't work so much as a wiki. Articles can of course have multiple authors, but I don't think we envisage people changing other peoples articles! The idea would be to have more of a post-publication review - in the comments, or via trackbacks/pingbacks to other blog discussions, that the author could address at some point.
Good luck with this Daniel. Are all images and text under a creative commons (or similar) licence? It would be nice to be able use material from the tutorials in both workshops and seminars without breaking copyright. On a related note, do you have recommended image resolution for the wiki or should the images link to a higher resolution version? This would be idea for their inclusion in other seminars.
Alastair, good point, I think we all feel an appropriate CC licence should be in place for this, but there is no decision on this yet. I guess the image resolution depends on how you author the tutorial. If they're embedded in a Word document and then posted, I suspect they would remain at 'Word' resolution. If you were to edit the post in the WordPress interface, you would be able to exercise more control over the formatting. We would support both endeavours, but the idea of Knowledgeblog was to allow people to post articles to the system using whatever their current toolchain is
Regarding whether it should be a wiki, definitely it should not! I might want to publish a tutorial using for solving a problem X using a tool Y, I don't want others editing it to use a tool Z because the community believes a tool Z is better. They should write their own tutorial on using a tool Z.
Jan, this is what we envisage as well. Wiki's are great, but not for what we're trying to do :)