rrwick.github.io/2025/09/23/a...
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rrwick.github.io/2025/09/23/a...
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If you want the best possible long-read bacterial genome assemblies, Autocycler is the tool for you! It is computationally intensive (due to the need to generate many alternative input assemblies) but consistently more accurate than other methods.
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If you want the best possible long-read bacterial genome assemblies, Autocycler is the tool for you! It is computationally intensive (due to the need to generate many alternative input assemblies) but consistently more accurate than other methods.
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In the paper you said: "...Illumina sequencing can generate spurious indels within HTs, especially for HT lengths longer than 14 bp." Do you have a sense of how bad this gets for really long homopolymers, e.g. 20+ bp?
In the paper you said: "...Illumina sequencing can generate spurious indels within HTs, especially for HT lengths longer than 14 bp." Do you have a sense of how bad this gets for really long homopolymers, e.g. 20+ bp?
Also, I ran my tests on an ARM Mac, but the docs suggest that myloasm (specifically the polishing step) will be even faster on x86-64 CPUs with AVX2.
Also, I ran my tests on an ARM Mac, but the docs suggest that myloasm (specifically the polishing step) will be even faster on x86-64 CPUs with AVX2.
1 thread: 435 seconds, 10.1 GB RAM
2 threads: 238 seconds, 10.0 GB RAM
4 threads: 133 seconds, 10.1 GB RAM
8 threads: 73 seconds, 10.1 GB RAM
16 threads: 49 seconds, 13.3 GB RAM
1 thread: 435 seconds, 10.1 GB RAM
2 threads: 238 seconds, 10.0 GB RAM
4 threads: 133 seconds, 10.1 GB RAM
8 threads: 73 seconds, 10.1 GB RAM
16 threads: 49 seconds, 13.3 GB RAM