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Fast Company
September 2000
John Ellis
The Secret of Life The mapping of the human genome, says Craig Venter, will change science, research, medicine, politics, health insurance, and the way biology looks at the last 3 billion years of evolution. And that's just the beginning. mark for My Articles similar articles
Fast Company
November 1999
John Ellis
Digital Matters - Issue 29 In My Humble Opinion: Genomics is the most important economic, political, and ethical issue facing mankind. mark for My Articles similar articles
Fast Company
May 2000
John Ellis
Digital Matters "A few years from now, we'll look back on dotcom mania as a model of investment sanity and prudence." mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2001
Michael D. Dalzell
Powerful Opportunities For Good and Greed Genetic advances could spawn incredible improvements in health care. Given public demand, they also pose what may be unmanageable issues of resource use... mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
December 2000
Nick Gillespie
The AWOL Electorate What we can learn from "vanishing voters": the country's general and substantial lack of interest in who becomes our next president. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
November 12, 2002
Davies et al.
John Craig Venter Unvarnished The former Celera CEO talks about that company's politics, the future of sequencing technology, and his own genome. mark for My Articles similar articles
Wired
August 2000
Jennifer Hillner
Area 22 The inside story of the first fully sequenced chromosome. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
December 10, 2002
Craig Venter Unvarnished (part II) The former Celera CEO covers privacy, ESTs, and his new research institutes. mark for My Articles similar articles
Reason
November 2000
Charles Paul Freund
The New Presidential Identity Nobody ever accused American presidential politics of suffering from too much dignity, but the 2000 election has been a singularly post-labial affair... mark for My Articles similar articles
Fast Company
November 2009
David H. Freedman
The Gene Bubble: Why We Still Aren't Disease-Free When the human genome was first sequenced nearly a decade ago, the world lit up with talk about how new gene-specific drugs would help us cheat death. Well, the verdict is in: Keep eating those greens. mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
February 26, 2002
Annalee Newitz
Genome liberation The information that details who we are is too important to be privately owned... mark for My Articles similar articles
Salon.com
June 27, 2000
Tabitha M. Powledge
Book of life? Hosanna! The Human Genome Project has been completed. We will now cure diseases, weed out defective genes and create a new supergeneration in the near future. Not. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
November 2006
Maureen Glabman
Genetic Testing: Major Opportunity, Major Problems Whether a person is likely to develop diabetes, cancer, schizophrenia, or stroke will be reasonably well predicted, and tests can also determine whether a patient will respond to a given therapy. That's the good part. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
April 15, 2003
Malorye Branca
Beyond the Blueprint How will the wealth of data emanating from the human genome and allied technologies impact research on health and disease? mark for My Articles similar articles