History » History » Version 24
Ward Vandewege, 10/07/2017 11:40 PM
1 | 1 | Anonymous | h1. History |
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3 | 12 | Tom Clegg | In 2006 researchers at "Dr. George Church's Lab":http://arep.med.harvard.edu/ at Harvard Medical School began work on the "Personal Genome Project.":http://www.personalgenomes.org/ The PGP collects and publishes whole genome sequencing, environmental, and trait data from individuals who openly consented to have their data shared on the internet under an IRB approved study. The vision was to publish 100,000 genomes at the Harvard project and help dozens of other project launch around the world. From the beginning, the team envisioned having data stored in data centers around the world that would need to be federated and shared. |
4 | 1 | Anonymous | |
5 | "Alexander Wait Zaranek PhD (Sasha)":http://openwetware.org/wiki/User:Alexander_Wait_Zaranek became Director of Informatics for the project and began developing an informatics platform that could accomplish the goals of the PGP leveraging the best thinking from Google and other organizations work with petabyte and exabyte scale data set distributed across data centers. |
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7 | 13 | Tom Clegg | Sasha worked with Tom Clegg and Ward Vandewege to design the system, build a prototype, and present a paper describing the approach at the 2008 USENIX Annual Technical Conference: "Free Factories: Unified Infrastructure for Data Intensive Web Services.":http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20514356 |
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9 | 12 | Tom Clegg | table{float:right;border:0;margin-left:2em;}. |
10 | |{border:0}. !Harvard_PGP_cluster_2012_sm.jpg! |
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11 | _One of the Harvard PGP Clusters_| |
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13 | 22 | Ward Vandewege | Sasha, Tom, Ward and other engineers have continued to build on the prototype presented in the paper. Free Factories ran two clusters at Harvard Medical School that powered the PGP. Together these clusters provided storage and computational resources for 300TB of data. |
14 | 2 | Anonymous | |
15 | 14 | Tom Clegg | In 2010, Sasha, Tom, Ward along with Zen Chu and Dr. Joe Thakuria started a company, Clinical Future, to drive broader adoption of the technology they had developed for the PGP. |
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17 | 23 | Ward Vandewege | In 2012 the team began re-working the API, evaluating requirements across other labs, and designing the next generation of the system. In 2013 Free Factories was renamed "Arvados", and the new open source project was officially announced to the world at Bio-IT World on April 11, 2013. |
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19 | 20 | Jonathan Sheffi | In December 2013, the company sponsoring Arvados development was renamed from "Clinical Future" to "Curoverse." |
20 | 19 | Peter Amstutz | |
21 | 24 | Ward Vandewege | In August 2017, Curoverse was acquired by Veritas Genetics. |
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23 | 17 | Anonymous | h3. Where is the name from? |
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25 | 23 | Ward Vandewege | The name Arvados comes from Star Trek: The Next Generation, where the planet "Arvada III":http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Arvada_III is the childhood home of Chief Medical Officer Beverly Crusher; Arvados would be the operating system for this future of medicine. |