ViroLab Posters and Leaflets
You may find here a selection of some of ViroLab posters and leaflets
Documents
African Ethnicity Is Associated with Slower Disease Progression in the Swiss HIV Cohort Study. Virolab poster presented at the 16th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, in Montreal, Canada, February 8-11 2009.
The Origins of Epidemic HIVs Date to a Unique Window of Opportunity for the Initial Spread of Zoonotic SIV Infections in Human Populations. Virolab poster presented at the 16th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, in Montreal, Canada, February 8-11 2009.
Flyer distributed at SC08,Austin,Texas,USA, November 15-21 2008.
Virolab poster presented by Viktor Müller at the World AIDS Day, China conference, Tianjin, 1-3 December 2006. This poster was based on and is essentially identical to David's earlier poster.
ViroLab poster presented at the 6th HIV Drug Resistance Workshop, Budapest, Hungary, 2008.
Poster about ViroLab presented at the fourth European HIV drug resistance workshop in Monaco (29-31 March 2006)
Poster presented by Viktor Müller at the Second International Conference of Immunogenomics and Immunomics, Budapest, 8-12 October 2006
Leaflet designed by HLRS
Poster presented at the Cracow Grid Workshop 2006 about Management and Access of Biomedical Data in a Grid Environment
Poster created for the Cracow Grid Workshop 2007
Poster presented at the German e-Science Conference 2007
Poster presented at the HLRS's open day
Project Description: ViroLab is based on Grid security infrastructure, middleware and user interfaces. The virtualization of resources such as data, instruments, compute nodes, tools, and users allows full resource transparency. These resources are made available by adopting Grid computing, and building on existing tools from projects such as CrossGrid, EGEE and VL-e.
Objectives: ViroLab virtual laboratory should provide an advanced collaboration space for the end user (scientist) and the experiment developer. There is a need for a high-level experiment plan notation, to express complex collaborative applications. It should be supported by tools facilitating clear development, release, execution and result management practices.