Author(s) | Wendi Bacon Helena Rasche |
Posted on: 19 December 2024
Community Pages
🎉 Ring in 2025 with the GTN’s Amazing New Feature! 🎉
We’re absolutely thrilled to introduce the fabulous Community Page—a glorious new addition that has us cheering! 🎊
Here’s why we’re so excited: this page automatically tracks and celebrates all the incredible resource contributions from our community over time. 🚀 Whether it’s new workflows, fresh training materials, or awesome contributors, everything is summed up for you, hassle-free!
Gone are the days of frantically piecing together achievements to impress institutes or grant bodies. No more scratching your head at year’s end wondering, “Wait… what *did we accomplish?”* GTN gets it. 💡 We know trainers are superheroes juggling this alongside their full-time research or infrastructure roles.
Now, with sleek live charts, we can see how our community shines 🌟—in real time! It’s a joyful reflection of all the hard work, dedication, and collaboration that make this community so special.
So here’s a huge THANK YOU to the GTN team for this spectacular gift! 🥳 You’ve truly embodied the spirit of user-centered design—not just for the scientists using Galaxy, but for those of us building it, too. 💖
Here’s to an exciting 2024 full of growth, achievements, and community magic! 🎆
#GratefulForGTN
You can find this and other useful features in a new tutorial collecting community resources.
Find your community’s home page
By scrolling down on the GTN topic page, to the new Community Resources section, and clicking on the Community Home button.
Or jump straight to your comunity home with one of the buttons below!
Introduction to Galaxy Analyses Using Galaxy & Managing your Data Galaxy Administration AI4Life Assembly Climate Community Computational Chemistry Contributing Data Science Development Ecology Epigenetics Evolution FAIR Genome Annotation Imaging Materials Science Metabolomics Microbiome Proteomics Sequence Analysis Single Cell Statistics & Machine Learning Synthetic Biology Teaching Transcriptomics Variant Analysis Visualisation
Finally, you can see an example from the Single-cell topic below: