The meeting on ‘Quasispecies: past, present and future’ took place between 17 and 18 November 2008, in Barcelona, Spain, and was organized by J. Gomez, C. Lopez‐Galindez, M.A. Martinez & A. Mas. ![][1] A meeting was held in Barcelona, Spain, in November 2008 to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the publication of the article that described the extensive genetic heterogeneity of bacteriophage Qβ (Domingo et al , 1978), which is considered to mark the beginning of experimental studies on viral quasispecies. This meeting was held at the impressive fifteenth century building of the ancient Hospital de la Santa Creu in the old town of Barcelona, which is now the headquarters of the Institut d'Estudis Catalans, and was attended by C. Weissmann (Jupiter, FL, USA), M. Billeter (Zurich, Switzerland) and E. Domingo (Madrid, Spain), who were three early protagonists of the phage Qβ work at the University of Zurich in the 1970s. Several speakers presented their results on the theoretical aspects of the population dynamics of cells and viruses, the clinical implications of quasispecies, and extensions of the quasispecies concept to cellular genes and prions. The meeting was introduced by A. Mas (Albacete, Spain), who reflected on the increasing impact that quasispecies have had in the scientific literature over the past three decades, and quoted some of the key references on viral quasispecies (Martell et al , 1992; Meyerhans et al , 1989; Najera et al , 1995; Vignuzzi et al , 2006; for a historical review of the impact of quasispecies in virology, see Holland, 2006). The scientific presentations were opened by Weissmann and Domingo, who were the last and first authors of the 1978 paper, respectively. Their talks conveyed the scientific atmosphere of the 1970s—when molecular biology was carried out with few recombinant‐DNA techniques—to a young audience. Nucleic‐acid sequencing was in … [1]: /embed/graphic-1.gif