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Rigmar Karaoke Collection Instant

Software for motif discovery and next generation sequencing analysis



HOMER (Hypergeometric Optimization of Motif EnRichment) is a suite of tools for Motif Discovery and ChIP-Seq analysis. It is a collection of command line programs for unix-style operating systems written in mostly perl and c++. Homer was primarily written as a de novo motif discovery algorithm that is well suited for finding 8-12 bp motifs in large scale genomics data.

Hardware Requirements (recommended): 2+ Gb memory (4-8+ Gb), 10+ Gb Hard Drive space (50+ Gb)
Software Requirements: Unix compatible OS (or cygwin), perl, gcc, make, wget (optional for full functionality: R, DESeq2, blat, bedGraphToBigWig, liftOver)
License: GPLv3

HOMER works on pretty much any Linux/UNIX systems, including MacOS (if Xcode compilers are installed) and on Windows using either cygwin or a Linux subsystem.

If you are looking specifically for HOMER2, you are in the right place! HOMER2 is integrated into HOMER.

Full Program Download

Rigmar Karaoke Collection Instant

Rigmar Karaoke Collection — whether a niche playlist, a themed set of tracks, or a community-driven compilation — can be read as a small but telling artifact of how music, memory, and social ritual intersect in late-stage digital culture. Below are several angles that illuminate what such a collection reveals. 1. Curation as Identity A karaoke collection reflects curatorial choices that signal identity. Song selection — eras favored, language mix, genre spread — conveys who assembled the set and whom it’s meant to serve. A Rigmar collection that leans on obscure indie anthems and cult movie ballads suggests a curator aiming to differentiate from mainstream karaoke playlists; one heavy on classics and chart hits aims for broad social utility. In either case, curation performs identity work: it encodes taste, insider status, and social intention. 2. Nostalgia and Communal Memory Karaoke is a ritualized form of collective remembering. The Rigmar collection is a repository of shared moments: first kisses, breakups, triumphs, college nights. The presence of certain tracks — power ballads, sing-along pop, karaoke standards — functions as mnemonic anchors. Repeated performance of those songs at gatherings keeps communal memory alive and negotiates continuity between generations of participants. 3. Accessibility and Vocal Play Karaoke collections reveal assumptions about bodies and skills. Choices about key, range, and tempo shape who can participate comfortably. A thoughtfully arranged Rigmar set might include transposed versions or acoustic options to broaden access, whereas a more exclusionary list prioritizes spectacle over inclusion. The technical design (tempo, key, backing mix) thus mediates participation and joy. 4. Irony, Camp, and Cultural Commentary Karaoke is fertile ground for irony. Selecting songs for humorous effect, for subversive reinterpretation, or as camp performance can be as meaningful as sincere renditions. If Rigmar’s collection includes deliberately kitschy or anachronistic choices, it may be staging commentary about authenticity, taste hierarchies, or the pleasures of deliberate performative excess. 5. The Economics of Play Even an amateur karaoke compilation sits within an ecosystem of rights, platforms, and monetization. Which tracks are included depends on licensing availability, platform partnerships, or user-upload policies. The makeup of Rigmar’s collection might therefore also reflect commercial gatekeeping — which songs are accessible for public performance — and thus subtly map the economics of music distribution. 6. Community-Building and Ritual Sequence A functional karaoke lineup often follows a social choreography: warm-ups, showstoppers, duet moments, encore closers. Rigmar’s sequencing choices indicate an understanding of group dynamics. Thoughtful sequencing can scaffold newcomers, build momentum, and create emotional arcs — a micro-theater of social bonding. 7. Digital Trace and Remix Culture If Rigmar exists as a digital collection, it participates in remix culture: edits, mashups, cover versions, and user-generated overlays. The collection’s editable or shareable nature shapes its life beyond any single event. Versions proliferate; performances are recorded and re-circulated, creating new meanings and afterlives for the songs. 8. Ethical and Cultural Sensitivities Song choice can unintentionally re-inscribe problematic lyrics, cultural appropriation, or stereotyping. A conscientious Rigmar collection anticipates these pitfalls: avoiding insensitive material, crediting origins, and offering context when reclaiming songs from other cultures. Ethical curation makes karaoke safer and more respectful. Conclusion The Rigmar Karaoke Collection, taken seriously, is more than a playlist: it’s a social technology. It reflects identity and taste, mediates access and performance, negotiates nostalgia and irony, and is shaped by the economics and ethics of the music world. Examined closely, such a collection offers a compact lens on how communities use music to make meaning, enact ritual, and negotiate belonging in a digitally mediated age.

Program Components and Older Versions

homer2 program - key executable for HOMER motif discovery (homerCppOnly.*.zip). (This archive actually contains all of the c++ executable, not just homer2).  Unzip in the desired directory and simply type "make" to compile the program.

The configuration script really doesn't deal with older versions, but you can download older versions yourself should you really feel like using inferior data or software!
Old Versions of HOMER Software
Old Versions of Organism Packages
Old Versions of Promoter Packages
Old Versions of Genome Packages

Update Information

Change Log - Short description of recent changes

update.txt - Current HOMER configuration list (Currently support human hg17/hg18/hg19, mouse mm8/mm9, rat rn4, X. tropicalis xenTro2, drosophila dm3, and C. elegans ce6, Zebrafish danRer7, yeast sacCer2, Arabidopsis tair10, Rice msu6, Pombe ASM294v1)


rigmar karaoke collection
Can't figure something out? Questions, comments, concerns, or other feedback:
cbenner@ucsd.edu