Features

01 March 2003

Once again the paperless laboratory, particularly in connection with the US Food and Drug Administration's Rule 21 CFR Part 11, is one of the main themes in the latest crop of LIMS advances and announcements. By Phillip Hill

01 March 2003

A data management software system now being installed in the UK will save astronomers precious time, and even tell them when their equipment is not working as it should. Phillip Hill reports

01 January 2003

John Murphy profiles the Head of Numerical Relativity Group, Albert Einstein Institute

01 January 2003

Trevor De Silva and Geoff Parker, from the consultancy Scimcon, discuss the causes of the data explosion in the laboratory, and suggest ways to tame it

01 January 2003

Unsolved problems can now be viewed in a new light, thanks to advances in digital image processing - and there are solutions available for scientific computing. By Ray Girvan

01 January 2003

Tomorrow's vehicles will benefit from better fuel cell technology, thanks to the use of computational fluid dynamics (CFD), says Lucy Farrington of CD adapco

01 November 2002

The methods used in analysing patient drug trials and motor engine tests could be used to solve many problems in other industries, argues The Mathworks' Dr Tanya Morton

01 November 2002

Virtual instrumentation is changing the way scientists measure and automate the world. Gricha Raether of National Instruments assesses recent developments in this cutting edge field

01 November 2002

The paperless laboratory, and managing information for life sciences' researchers, are among the themes discernible during SCW's regular review of the LIMS world, Tom Wilkie writes

01 November 2002

John Murphy profiles Paul Messina, former director of the Center for Advanced Computing Research at CalTech

01 September 2002

Tony Hey and Anne Trefethen outline the efforts being made to help the UK meet the challenges of computing across the Grid

01 September 2002

The old Latin riddle 'Quis custiodet ipsos custiodes?' ('Who guards the guardians themselves?') is a good one for scientists and managers to ponder when they are considering the integrity of data in LIMS. Alex Crawford reports

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