Features
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
John Murphy profiles the Professor of Computer Engineering and Informatics at the University of Patras
Robert DeWitte, Marketing Director of ACD Labs, tells Tom Wilkie how Russian scientists' deep understanding of chemical structure grew into a global software business.
John Murphy profiles the director of the Center for Grid Technologies, Information Sciences Institute
In our latest roundup of comings and going in the world of Laboratory Information Management Systems, Vanessa Spedding finds the bulk of recent activity involves an industrious few
Ray Girvan discovers that the race to create ever more real computer games is having a beneficial effect on scientific computing
Cross-fertilisation is the name of the game for Warwick University's Centre for Scientific Computing. Vanessa Spedding explores the motives behind its creation
Brian Donnelly, chairman and CEO of GeneticXchange, tells Tom Wilkie about the unexpected similarity between computing for life sciences and computing for big banks.
Tom Wilkie spoke to Lucas Noldus, whose company produces computerised systems for tracking and observing animal behaviour. The applications, he found, stretch from new drugs to functional genomics
Scientists are building a seamless, global, astronomical resource: a 'virtual observatory' that will supply data at all wavelengths through a common interface. Vanessa Spedding catches up with European initiatives
If you think the words 'decisive' and 'fast-moving' could not appear in the same sentence as 'government-run utility lab', think again, as one large LIMS company bidding for business recently had to. Vanessa Spedding reports
Brian Donnelly, chairman and CEO of GeneticXchange, tells Tom Wilkie about the unexpected similarity between computing for life sciences and computing for big banks.
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A roundup of software tools available to scientists using HPC and AI software
Scientists and researchers are using AI to help accelerate the discovery of new drugs for a wide variety of different medical applications.
Integrators and cloud providers help facilitate access to HPC and deliver additional expertise and support, which helps scientists to effectively use computing resources, finds Robert Roe
Today’s DNA sequencing technologies now make it possible to sequence whole human genomes cost effectively and with speed.
The world of MultiBody Dynamics simulation is changing, writes Gemma Church
Quantum technology is going through a period of rapid development, with several technologies driving the adoption of this emerging computing framework, finds Robert Roe
A roundup of cloud technology providers that support researchers using HPC