Jim Kent

Jim Kent

Photo courtesy of Jim Kent.
Born February 10, 1960 (1960-02-10) (age 52)
Hawaii
Nationality United States
Notable awards Overton Prize, Benjamin Franklin Award (Bioinformatics)

William James (Jim) Kent (born February 10, 1960) is an American research scientist and computer programmer. He has been a contributor to genome database projects and the 2003 winner of the Benjamin Franklin Award (Bioinformatics).

Contents

Early life

Kent was born in Hawaii and grew up in San Francisco, California, United States.

Computer Animation

Kent began his programming career in 1983 with Island Graphics Inc. where he wrote the Aegis Animator program for the Amiga home computer. This program combined polygon tweening in 3D with simple 2D cel-based animation. In 1985 he founded and ran a software company, Dancing Flame, which adapted the Aegis Animator to the Atari ST,[1] and created Cyber Paint[2] for that machine. Cyber Paint was a 2D animation program that brought together a wide variety of animation and paint functionality and the delta-compressed animation format developed for CAD-3D. The user could move freely between animation frames and paint arbitrarily, or utilize various animation tools for automatic tweening movement across frames. Cyber Paint was one of the first, if not the first, consumer program that enabled the user to paint across time in a compressed digital video format. Later he developed a similar program, the Autodesk Animator for PC compatibles, where the image compression improved to the point it could play off of hard disk, and one could paint using "inks" that performed algorithmic transformations such as smoothing, transparency, and tiled patterns. The Autodesk Animator was used to create artwork for a wide variety of video games.[3]

Involvement with the Human Genome Project

While working on his PhD in Biology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, Kent in May 2000, wrote a program, GigAssembler,[4] that allowed the publicly funded Human Genome Project to assemble and publish the human genome sequence. His efforts were motivated by the research needs of himself and his colleagues, but also out of concern that the data might be made proprietary via patents by Celera Genomics.[5] In his close race with Celera, Kent and the UCSC Professor David Haussler quickly built a modest cluster of 50 commodity Personal Computers running the Linux operating system to run the software. In contrast Celera was using what was thought of then as one of the most powerful civilian supercomputers in the world. His first assembly on the human genome was released on June 22. Celera finished its assembly on June 25, and the dual results were announced at the White House on June 26. On July 7, the Santa Cruz data was made publicly available on the Web Wide Web. In 2002 Tim O'Reilly described Kent's work as "the most significant work of open source development in the past year". While all of Kent's genomics software is open source in the sense that the source code can be downloaded and read for free, and all of the software can be freely used for academic, nonprofit, and personal use, some of it requires a license, either from UCSC or from Kent Informatics Inc., for commercial use.[6]

After GigAssembler, Kent went on to write BLAT (BLAST-like alignment tool) [7] and the UCSC Genome Browser [8] to help analyze important genome data, receiving his PhD in biology in 2002. Today at UCSC he works primarily on web tools to help understand the human genome. He helps maintain and upgrade the browser, and has worked on comparative genomics,[9] Parasol, a job control management software for the UCSC kilocluster, and the ENCODE Project.

References

External links