CMP 243 Homework 0
CMP 243 Homework 0
Due/do: right away
Here are some things you need to do to get started in this class.
- Register for the class asap, today if possible. We can't
get a bigger classroom until the official enrollment
is large. Currently it is 6. Ask me (again?) by email if you
still need a permission code.
- If you filled out a form for a computer account, make
sure it is for a guest account for this quarter on the "barnyard"
machines oink, moo and quack. Take this form to Heidi Sitton in
Applied Science Room 137 between 10AM and 4PM on Monday to
get your account set up.
- Drop off your questionnaires in my box at the CS board
office (2nd floor of Applied Sciences.) If you didn't get one to
fill out, extra copies are available in the file drawer across
from the board office in the CMP243 folder. Extra copies of
the other handouts are there too: course description and synopsis,
Tooze chapter on proteins, Campbell chapter on the central dogma,
Science paper on Methanococcus jannaschii, and Chapter 1
of the text.
- Get on the web and look around.
Play around in Entrez.
There are links to a lot of things starting
from the class page as well.
For CSE students, read some of the on-line intros to Molecular
Biology. Find one intro written for the DOE Human Genome Project under
the class page on bibliographic resources. (I'm not giving
an explicit link here to force you to explore a bit.) Also read Dick Karp's
summary of genomics for CS students, lecture 1 of his class
at the University of Washington (find this under the "www pages
for other bioinformatics courses" link). Finally, if you
want to get a postscript version of Chapter 1 of the text, follow
the class link "text and reserve books" and click on "postscript".
See me for the login and password.
- Check out the books on reserve in the Science library.
Doolittle book has chapters on most of the major databases and sequence
analysis programs. Read the chapter on Entrez. I'll put a "master"
xerox copy in the file drawer in Applied Sciences, and on reserve.
Also, for CSE students, Lydia recommends reading chapter 7 of Campbell,
"a tour of the cell". Again, I'll make a master xerox available as well.
- Go back and review your probability and statistics! Chapter 1
of the text is dense. (It is really more of a mathematical appendix
for the text, I think). You don't need to read the sections marked with
the special "math triangle". We'll be getting to this material starting
in week 2.
Questions regarding about page content should be directed to
haussler@cse.ucsc.edu.
Last modified September 30, 1996.
Back to the CMP 243 Class Page.