Laboratory informatics tools have continued to converge around requirements for data management and movement within an organisation.
Features
People differ in many ways, which is why biometrics is a booming business and why Michael Kenward found a wealth of related websites
J. Kelly Ganjei, Terry Smallmon and Charles Lee of LabVantage report how LIMS helped a food firm
In this final review of 2003, Phillip Hill looks at the collaborations and concentrations that have taken place in the LIMS market this year
Complex systems are a growing area of research, and finding good sites can be complicated, says Michael Kenward
John Murphy profiles the computational chemistry pioneer and baseball fanatic
John P. Helfrich, from NuGenesis Technologies, believes that a new class of IT product can capture and manage scientific data to improve drug discovery
Annabel Sedgwick describes how Applied Biosystems is putting researchers firmly in the driving seat in managing their scientific projects
Economic and business pressures are forcing drug companies to deploy computing, but there are still gaps between what users want and what can be achieved, says Peter Rees
The way to interface and integrate chromatography data systems is a major theme in this issue's review of laboratory information management systems, writes Phillip Hill
The Internet is itself a suitable case for research, as Michael Kenward found when surfing sites on the Web given over to research on the Web into the Web
Ray Girvan traces the rise of the machines - both digital and analogue - in an era of mechanical computation
At a partnership seminar held recently at its European headquarters, LabWare set out a striking vision of the company's future development. Tom Wilkie was there
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