OME Software Developer
- Posted 24 days ago
About this job
Technologies
Job description
The project will involve extensive collaboration with academic researchers in Oxford, the main OME development team in Dundee, and other developers and researchers based in locations across Europe and North America. The developer will have significant autonomy to define goals and decide on the direction of the project, but the broad aims are to implement and develop functionality within the OMERO environment to enable image processingand analysis, and to streamline workflow for the large number of researchers carrying out bioimaging in Micron Oxford (based in the department of Biochemistry, Dunn school and other University of Oxford departments). Where others are involved in similar development work for OMERO, the Oxford OME developer will also be expected to advise, mentor and train them.
This full-time post is available from the 1st April 2012. It is funded by the Wellcome Trust for up to 3 years in the first instance and is under the direction of Professor Ilan Davis. The position is graded on the University’s grade 8 pay scale, for which the salary range is £37,012 - £44,166 per annum. The actual starting salary offered will be based on qualifications and relevant skills acquired.For further general information, phone (01865) 613204, quoting reference number BR/497.
Skills & requirements
About the company
The Open Microscopy Environment (OME) is a multi-site collaborative effort among academic laboratories and a number of commercial entities that produces open tools to support data management for biological light microscopy. Designed to interact with existing commercial software, all OME formats and software are free, and all OME source code is available under the GNU General public license or through commercial license from Glencoe Software.
OME is developed as a joint project between research-active laboratories at the Dundee, NIA Baltimore, and Harvard Medical School and LOCI. In addition, OME has active collaborations with many imaging and informatics groups.
While many other applications could use OME's architecture and design, our specific implementation is focused on biological and biomedical imaging.
The University of Oxford is a complex and stimulating organisation, which enjoys an international reputation as a world-class centre of excellence in research and teaching. It employs over 10,000 staff and has a student population of over 21,000.Most staff are directly appointed and managed by one of the University’s 130 departments or other units within a highly devolved operational structure - this includes 5,900 ‘academic-related’ staff (postgraduate research, computing, senior library, and administrative staff) and 2,820 ‘support’ staff (including clerical, library, technical, and manual staff). There are also over 1,600 academic staff (professors, readers, lecturers), whose appointments are in the main overseen by a combination of broader divisional and local faculty board/departmental structures. Academics are generally all also employed by one of the 38 constituent colleges of the University as well as by the central University itself.
Our annual income in 2009/10 was £879.8m. Oxford is one of Europe's most innovative and entrepreneurial universities: income from external research contracts exceeds £367m p.a., and more than 60 spin-off companies have been created.