dd@beta.lanl.gov (Dan Davison) (07/06/89)
[the following is commentary on the message that appeared on the BIONET login banner July 1] Part of the message said: As many of you know from our bulletin board postings over the last year, the BIONET grant was up for renewal. A special study section was formed to review the Resource and a site visit was conducted. Unfortunately the BIONET Resource was not recommended for further funding primarily due to the opinion of the site committee that the requirement for a strong research program had not been met. Research, in addition to BIONET's service, training, and communications functions, is required by the NIH Division of Research Resource regulations. If BIONET did not fulfill its obligations under the current contract, then there can be no quarrel with the termination of that contract. However, that does not mean that the baby should be thrown out with the bath water. After receiving this decision, we explored other methods of obtaining funding in an attempt to preserve what we had every reason to believe was a valuable service to the research community. Currently, for example, BIONET is used for over 60 searches of the various sequence databases every day of the month! I infer from this that the study section for Bionet felt that the service side of BIONET-- the access to databases, the searching capabilities, and the communications with other scientists-- were relatively unimportant. This view is a mystery to me. I don't know who was on the study section, but I would suspect that they were all computer "experts*". They would consider the capabilities of BIONET easily reproducible in their laboratories. But for the great unwashed masses of bench scientists, this is not true. Yes, restriction enzyme searches should be done with local computing power. Even with fast database search algorithms, not every laboratory can afford a fast 386-based PC with lots of hard disk for the data bases, a phone line or other connection to the campus network (& therefore the Internet or Bitnet), and the time to update data regularly. Also, laboratories that I have known don't have a computer dedicated to databases and searching--usually it has to be the grant manager, memo writer, and manuscript machine also. It simply wouldn't be available to do long searches of the databanks. I think that the NIH has an obligation to the 2000+ users of Bionet to make an equivalent facility available. Certainly NIH has raised the expectations of the molecular biologist as far as computers in everyday laboratory work are concerned. What would this replacement machine have? I think that it should (1) contain current versions of all the molecular biology databases, and allow users to retrieve parts of those databases (2) serve the communications functions that BIONET now serves, (3) contain facilities which the average user doesn't have useful access to presently. [Restriction enzyme searches, and protein translation can be done on local PCs]. Database searches, protein and nucleic acid structure prediction, phylogenetic analyses, and similarly computationally intensive procedures *do* belong on such a machine. The only way such a facility would be created is if the NIH understands that there is a demand for it. The only way they will know that is if we do something about it. If you are interested in expressing your desire for such a facility, or have comments about what programs should be available at the facility, let me know or post your comments. BTW, I'm *not* interested in running such a facility, but I do think we can influence NIH enough so that they would issue a RFP on this subject. The alternative is that NIH will pay for hundreds of PCs and workstations instead of a central facility, not the best use of limited research funds. dan davison/theoretical biology/t-10 ms k710/los alamos national laboratory los alamos, nm 875545/dd@lanl.gov (arpa)/dd@lanl.uucp(new)/..cmcl2!lanl!dd davison@UHOU (bitnet) As always, I speak for myself, and only for myself. (*) For reference, I would probably be considered an "expert" also. I don't need the analysis or database functions of Bionet; but I do think the communications functions are important. I also know a lot of scientists who do need the analysis and database functions! -- dan davison/theoretical biology/t-10 ms k710/los alamos national laboratory los alamos, nm 875545/dd@lanl.gov (arpa)/dd@lanl.uucp(new)/..cmcl2!lanl!dd