Галерея 3158171

Галерея 3158171




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Галерея 3158171


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Lengths can be entered using abbreviations like 500 Kb or 0.5M. The abbreviations accepted are: K, M, G, k, m, g, Kb, Mb, Gb, kb, mb, gb
Lengths can be entered using abbreviations like 500 Kb or 0.5M. The abbreviations accepted are: K, M, G, k, m, g, Kb, Mb, Gb, kb, mb, gb
Format Summary Full Report UI List ID Table ID Table (text) XML
See Genome Information for
Sphingobacterium thalpophilum
There are 14 assemblies for this organism See more
Annotation Date :: 10/06/2022 04:21:01
Annotation Pipeline :: NCBI Prokaryotic Genome Annotation Pipeline (PGAP)
Annotation Method :: Best-placed reference protein set; GeneMarkS-2+
Annotation Software revision :: 6.3
Features Annotated :: Gene; CDS; rRNA; tRNA; ncRNA; repeat_region
complete rRNAs :: 7, 7, 7 (5S, 16S, 23S)
Pseudo Genes (ambiguous residues) :: 0 of 25
Pseudo Genes (frameshifted) :: 4 of 25
Pseudo Genes (incomplete) :: 21 of 25
Pseudo Genes (internal stop) :: 4 of 25
Pseudo Genes (multiple problems) :: 3 of 25



Full sequence report


Statistics report


FTP directory for RefSeq assembly


FTP directory for GenBank assembly


NCBI Datasets






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NCBI Assembly Data Model



Click on the table row to see sequence details in the table to the right
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IDs: 3158171 [UID] 10611728 [GenBank] 10706568 [RefSeq]
Total number of chromosomes and plasmids
Sphingobacterium thalpophilum DSM 11723

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How dare they. That’s all I keep thinking. How dare commissioner Rob Manfred and the baseball owners treat their players and their fans like this. Don’t they recognize the impact of canceling games, the damage it will do to the sport, the idea that baseball is more than simply an industry, bigger than anyone lucky enough to be a part of it?
Oh, Manfred and the owners will object to that very premise, tell you all about their love for the game and how the other side is more to blame. Manfred said it himself Tuesday, “If it was solely within my ability or the ability of the clubs to get an agreement, we’d have an agreement.” Yep, if not for those damn players that fans pay to see — if only Manfred and Co. could remove them from these negotiations the way they scrubbed them from the league’s website — then everything would be all right.
Manfred and Co. think the fans will come back, because they always come back. They think the players ultimately will break, and in fact that might be the league’s goal. The owners initiated a lockout three months ago, then made a belated, strategic bull rush toward the players on Monday and Tuesday. Naturally, their last-minute pressure backfired, just as everything in this relationship backfires. As Manfred listed all of the wonders in the league’s “best and final” offer, it was as if he could not believe the players’ ingratitude.
The players, of course, took a slightly different view of the league’s supposed generosity, and now the first two series of the season are canceled, with possibly more to come. Manfred said weeks ago that losing games would be a disastrous outcome. In the end, that outcome was practically a foregone conclusion, a train wreck everyone saw coming, yet still could not be avoided.
Signs of trouble were obvious since at least the summer of 2020, when the players and owners could not agree on the terms of the pandemic-shortened season. Or, go back to Nov. 30, 2016, when both club officials and player agents identified a freshly minted collective-bargaining agreement as too favorable to the owners faster than you could say “CBT.”
The parties fought over almost everything, from a universal DH to expanded playoffs to the owners’ proposal for a shortened 2021 season because of lingering COVID-19 concerns. See the forest for the trees? The players and owners could not even get through the weeds. So, no one should be surprised that, in the final hours before the sport’s collapse, they disagreed about whether they had even been close to a deal.
They were not, despite the league’s propaganda to the contrary. And now, even though Manfred and the owners are responsible for the lockout, the deadlines and yes, the false hope, both sides must face the consequences. And, as the owners are well aware, those consequences for the players are likely to be worse.
This is not to suggest the players should have caved and accepted an offer they viewed as inadequate. The luxury-tax thresholds in the owners’ final offer were not high enough. The size of their proposed pre-arbitration bonus pool was too low. But you’re tired of reading about all that. I’m tired of writing about it. The aspect that is truly unconscionable is the almost blithe, even reckless approach by Manfred and the owners.
It’s not simply that Manfred at times smiled during his news conference Tuesday when he should have been more solemn; by now, his inadequacies as a public speaker are well-established. The bigger problem is that he and the owners have been unable to build a functional relationship with the players, and are unapologetic about it.
The players, in turn, view Manfred and Co. with contempt, a sentiment that helped unify them, but now will result in lost paychecks. Union negotiator Bruce Meyer said the players will fight for back pay and/or the rescheduling of canceled games, introducing yet another layer of conflict to this dispute. But the ramifications for players run deeper. For starters, the owners can outlast them.
April is typically a month of low attendance and revenue for many clubs, particularly those in colder climates. Local television contracts generally do not require clubs to issue rebates to their networks until about 25 games are missed, according to a source with knowledge of such deals. And the big money in the league’s national-television contracts comes from the postseason.
Players, on the other hand, are still recovering from the shortened 2020 season when they received only 37 percent of their pay. The union, drawing on its reserves, has authorized a monthly stipend of $15,000 for April, and its executive board will determine the next steps for future months if necessary. But if Meyer fails to restore the players’ full pay and service time, they will collectively lose $20.5 million for each day removed from the 186-day regular-season schedule. Once 15 days are missed, the free-agent eligibility of star players such as Shohei Ohtani and Pete Alonso could be delayed by one year, and the service time of hundreds of others will be affected as well.
The players have talked about striking back by refusing to approve expanded playoffs, an item the owners greatly desire, for at least 2022. The owners, though, can exact perhaps an even greater toll, reacting to their loss of revenue by clamping down on the free-agent market for all but superstars such as Carlos Correa and Freddie Freeman , and maybe even those players as well.
For the union, how exactly is this going to end well? It would be one thing if players were missing games to significantly disrupt the status quo, but they withdrew requests for major changes to the game’s economic system — a shorter time to free agency, expanded eligibility for salary arbitration, reductions in revenue shared between high- and low-revenue teams.
The remaining points of contention were in areas such as the luxury tax, pre-arbitration bonus pool and minimum salary. Any gains the players ultimately achieve, if they achieve them at all, figure to be incremental, singles instead of home runs. And, if the lockout lasts long enough, the players could be looking at a net loss.
The owners know all this, and still they couldn’t help themselves, couldn’t resist going for the throat. They, too, could end up net losers, depending upon how much the sport’s place in the entertainment landscape is diminished. But they seemingly would rather take that risk than satisfy the players who pitch and hit and make teams so valuable.
Which is the true shame in all this. The owners had the advantage. The owners, even if they had yielded to every one of the union’s last requests, were always going to have the advantage. The fallacy of the nearly $500 million they offered young players in additional compensation is that it might have amounted to little more than a redistribution. By paying mid-level veterans less, the owners could have kept payrolls roughly the same.
From the start, then, the players lacked leverage, were climbing uphill, had the odds stacked against them. The pandemic made their challenge that much more difficult, reducing club revenues in the past two seasons. The owners base their payrolls on those revenues, not the resale values of their franchises.
Perhaps the players should have asked for a one-year extension of the previous CBA, delaying the negotiations until a time when revenues had more fully recovered. But the players believed they could no longer wait for change, and it’s not as if the owners were guaranteed to be in a more giving mood. Before the pandemic hit, the clubs were delighting in their triumphs in the previous two CBAs, exploiting their terms to the fullest.
“The game has suffered damage for a while now. The game has changed. The game has been manipulated,” said Tony Clark, head of the players’ union. “The value inherent, and how players are respected and viewed, has changed. Players have been commoditized in a way that is really hard to explain in the grand scheme of things.”
It’s actually not that hard to explain, if you view baseball strictly as a business and understand the nature of capitalism. But baseball became the national pastime because it occupied a special place in the national consciousness. Manfred and the owners are messing with something dear to their players, dear to their fans, dear to so many people not just in this country, but also around the world.
The owners wanted to win in another rout. Now everyone loses.
(Photo: Mark Stahl / NurPhoto via AP)
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Ken Rosenthal is the senior baseball writer for The Athletic who has spent nearly 35 years covering the major leagues. In addition, Ken is a broadcaster and regular contributor to Fox Sports' MLB telecasts. He's also won Emmy Awards in 2015 and 2016 for his TV reporting. Follow Ken on Twitter @ Ken_Rosenthal

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1. 45076_G02 Organism: Sphingobacterium thalpophilum (CFB group bacteria) Submitter: SC Date: 2019/05/11 Assembly type: Assembly level: Complete Genome Genome representation: full RefSeq category: representative genome Relation to type material: assembly from type material GenBank assembly accession: GCA_901482695.1 (latest) RefSeq assembly accession: GCF_901482695.1 (latest) IDs: 3158171[UID ...
美國哲學選 | CUHK Digital Repository. Home ›. Digital Collections ›. Hong Kong Collection 香港特藏 ›.
2. März 2022 Ken Rosenthal is the senior baseball writer for The Athletic who has spent nearly 35 years covering the major leagues. In addition, Ken is a broadcaster and regular contributor to Fox Sports' MLB ...
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1. 45076_G02 Organism: Sphingobacterium thalpophilum (CFB group bacteria) Submitter: SC Date: 2019/05/11 Assembly type: Assembly level: Complete Genome Genome representation: full RefSeq category: representative genome Relation to type material: assembly from type material GenBank assembly accession: GCA_901482695.1 (latest) RefSeq assembly accession: GCF_901482695.1 (latest) IDs: 3158171[UID ...
美國哲學選 | CUHK Digital Repository. Home ›. Digital Collections ›. Hong Kong Collection 香港特藏 ›.
2. März 2022 Ken Rosenthal is the senior baseball writer for The Athletic who has spent nearly 35 years covering the major leagues. In addition, Ken is a broadcaster and regular contributor to Fox Sports' MLB ...
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