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HYDRA

In Greek mythology, the Lernaean Hydra was an ancient serpent-like water monster with reptilian traits. It possessed many heads (the poets mention more heads than the vase-painters could paint) and for each head cut off it grew two more. It had poisonous breath and blood so virulent that even its tracks were deadly. The Hydra of Lerna was killed by Heracles as the second of his Twelve Labours. Its lair was the lake of Lerna in the Argolid, though archaeology has borne out the myth that the sacred site was older even than the Mycenaean city of Argos since Lerna was the site of the myth of the Danaids. Beneath the waters was an entrance to the Underworld, and the Hydra was its guardian.

Hydra has been reincarnated as a 24-core Personal Supercomputer with 512Gb of RAM and 12Tb of on-board memory. Hydra now lives to align and establish differential regulation from deep sequence data such as RNAseq. Hydra is web-aware and can be accessed from anywhere in the World. Hydra was purchased in collaboration with Prof. David Murphy and Dr Colin Campbell and is kept under control by Dr Mark Rogers. 

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