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Bio-IT World April 2007 Vicki Glaser |
Software Solutions for Medicinal Chemistry Driven by advances in chemical synthesis, instrumentation, and high-throughput and high-content screening technology, medicinal chemistry's transition from an art to a science is benefiting from a wealth of new software products, spanning both bio- and cheminformatics. |
Bio-IT World March 10, 2003 Mark D. Uehling |
Technology Overload Inundated with new IT tools and mountains of data, the pharmaceutical industry struggles to pull it all together. |
Chemistry World August 13, 2015 |
Exploiting the data mine Chemists must embrace open data to allow us to collectively get the best out of the masses of new knowledge we unearth, reports Clare Sansom |
Reactive Reports Issue 55 David Bradley |
Interview with Wendy Warr This well-known and well-respected expert in the field of chemical information creates online reports and opinions that are essential reading for chemists hoping to understand the changes in information that are currently underway. |
Chemistry World September 2006 Yfke Hager |
Careers: Analytical Expertise After years of jumping between chemistry jobs, Adam Hold created his dream career by setting up his own company to provide analytical services. |
Bio-IT World April 2006 John Russell |
Pfizer's Pursuit of Technology Can this $50-billion-plus, 115,000-employee behemoth succeed where other pharma giants have failed and successfully institutionalize the effort to find and develop critical new technology? Should it even try? |
Chemistry World May 22, 2013 |
Notebooks go digital Electronic lab notebooks are changing the way many scientists interact with information. These notebooks, ELNs for short, capture experiment details and data that are fully searchable within and across experiments. |
Bio-IT World May 19, 2004 John Russell |
Informatics Black Boxes ... Not! Vertex's chief technical officer, discusses informatics' bad reputation, buying vs. building, open-source tools, and ROI on IT. |
HHMI Bulletin Nov 2011 Sarah C. P. Williams |
Living Chemistry Biologists understand better what chemists can bring to the table. And chemists understand better the questions that biologists really care about. This has led to a bigger impact of chemists on biological problems. |
CIO October 15, 2001 Stephanie Overby |
Drug Companies on speed The marriage of IT and medical research may be just what traditional pharmaceutical companies need to survive in an increasingly competitive field. Learn how IT is bringing the pharmaceutical industry into the information age... |
Bio-IT World April 15, 2003 Mark D. Uehling |
Target Elimination Industry and FDA scientists turn to databases, applications software, and laboratory chips to move the safest, most effective molecules into clinical trials. |
Bio-IT World February 2006 Robert M. Frederickson |
Experiments in Data Integration Teranode evolved from a group of University of Washington scientists and has rapidly become a leading developer of informatics software for bio-scientists. |
Chemistry World July 6, 2012 |
Protein power Tom Muir, professor of chemistry and molecular biology, Princeton University, US, is an expert in protein engineering and its application to studying cellular signalling networks. |
Bio-IT World September 2006 Kevin Davies |
Pfizer's Global Survey of Pharmacological Space The pharma blends knowledge, computational chemistry and research informatics to build a unified database. Gathering all the data in one place offered greater control for indexing and data retrieval and management, enabling Pfizer scientists to perform global mapping. |
HHMI Bulletin Nov 2011 Sarah C.P. Williams. |
Carolyn Bertozzi: Changed Expectations Chemists trained in biology were once a rarity -- now they're becoming the norm. |
Bio-IT World November 2006 Kevin Davies |
Jubilant Curries Favor with BioPharma The explosion of drug discovery and development operations in India is epitomized by the success of several companies. Quietly building on a decade of experience in computational and bio-IT fields, JBL is rapidly pushing into a suite of drug discovery and development activities. |
Chemistry World January 2012 |
Cultivating collaboration A new network aims to bring the power of interdisciplinary innovation to bear on global food issues. |
Bio-IT World September 2005 Kevin Davies |
Bringing Good Things to Informatics In interview with Nick Giannasi, Head of Informatics for GE Healthcare's Bio-Sciences division on how the company is shedding light on data integration in discovery and clinical trials. |
Reactive Reports November 2005 David Bradley |
Peter Murray-Rust An interview with the scientific software developer, originally a crystallographer with a DPhil from Oxford, on how he is now helping to establish novel software and Web technologies for chemists and other scientists underpinned by the concept of open source. |
Chemistry World December 2007 Richard Van Noorden |
Surfing Web2O The rapid evolution of the world wide web is creating fresh opportunities - and challenges - for chemistry. |
Entrepreneur April 2007 Nichole L. Torres |
Unlock Ideas To stimulate economic development and innovation, the Delaware Economic Development Office, or DEDO, has guaranteed 255 donated patents -- 250 from DuPont Co. and five from Hercules Chemical Co. |
Bio-IT World February 11, 2005 Prashant Tyagi |
Can Life Sciences Go the IT Way? Guest commentary: lessons for guiding the revolution in biotechnology and other life science disciplines. |
Chemistry World December 16, 2013 Anthony King |
Database of 15 million chemical structures set free A collection of over 15 million chemical structures from patents -- SureChem -- is to be made freely available through the European Bioinformatics Institute. |
Chemistry World October 2010 |
Column: In the pipeline Derek Lowe investigates the comeback combinatorial chemistry has made in the field of drug discovery |
Chemistry World February 13, 2012 |
Building a nation of scientists Goverdhan Mehta talks to Sheena Elliott and Elinor Richards about the progress of science in India and the challenges scientists face |
Chemistry World May 19, 2008 Hepeng Jia |
China's one stop research shop John Oyler has founded a string of startups in the US, but in 2005 he chose China as his base to launch BioDuro, a life sciences Contract Research Organisation. |
Chemistry World December 11, 2015 Jonathan Fogg |
50 chemistry ideas you really need to know Hayley Birch's 50 chemistry ideas you really need to know provides an engaging and concise overview of the subject for novices, like me. |
Chemistry World July 2008 Kevin Rogers |
What future for small molecule therapy? Pharmaceutical companies overlook bench chemists at their peril |
Chemistry World October 2009 |
Agriculture's call for chemistry Decades of underinvestment in agricultural research have taken their toll but now is the time to bring in young scientists to find new ways to feed the world. |
Chemistry World June 2007 |
Student Book Reviews Chemistry for CSI Fans... At the Heart of Molecular Biology... A Broad Vista of Chemistry...Rings Are Not Just for Carbons... etc. |
Chemistry World October 12, 2011 Joanne Thomson |
Hot Chemistry Temperature played a crucial role in David MacMillan's decision to study chemistry. |
Bio-IT World March 8, 2005 Kevin Davies |
InforSense Approach to Data Sharing CEO Yike Guo discusses Shanghai's giant grid computing project to link scientists. |
Chemistry World February 2010 |
Column: In the pipeline Fraudulent scientific results can terrorise a company's patent claims. Chemical patents have (especially among academic researchers) a reputation for unreliability and deliberate obscurity. |
Chemistry World March 16, 2011 |
Inspirational science Seong Keun Kim is head of the Molecular Reaction Dynamics Laboratory at Seoul National University, Korea. He uses spectroscopic, microscopic and computational methods to investigate a wide range of subjects from molecular physics and nanoscience to cell biology. |
Chemistry World April 8, 2014 Powell & Lancaster |
Strength in numbers Analytical science in all its forms makes an enormous contribution to the bottom line and we need a body of analytical chemists capable of both developing new measurement techniques and of applying those that already exist in new ways. |
HHMI Bulletin Nov 2011 Robert Tjian |
President's Letter: Intellectual Ferment There are exciting connections between chemistry and biology from both "sides" of the disciplinary divide. |
Reactive Reports Issue 60 David Bradley |
Mark Leach Interview with the owner of Meta-Synthesis, a company aimed to reveal the inner secrets of chemistry to as wide an audience as possible. |
Chemistry World October 31, 2012 Andrew Turley |
Chemists contribute to prior art hunt Do you know some chemistry? Do you have spare time? Then it might be that you can make money stress testing the patent literature with Article One Partners, a crowdsourcing website. |
Reactive Reports Issue 74 David Bradley |
Reactive Profile--Noel O'Boyle Interview with a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Development Group working on drug discovery, protein-ligand docking, cheminformatics, QSAR, and computational chemistry. |
Reactive Reports Issue 56 David Bradley |
Interview with William James Griffiths The developer of ChemRefer.com provides quick and free access to chemistry literature. |
Chemistry World April 10, 2008 Luisa Massarani |
Brazil Pins Economic Hopes on Science Brazil's future prosperity depends on training more young scientists. |
Bio-IT World June 17, 2004 John Garvey |
Rational Decisions As companies in the computationally guided rational drug design sector mature, they should be more sure of the boundaries that surround their proprietary technologies. |
ONLINE Sep/Oct 2007 Svetla Baykoucheva |
A New Era in Chemical Information: PubChem, DiscoveryGate, and Chemistry Central How the emergence of PubChem, DiscoveryGate and Chemistry Central are changing the field of chemical information. |
Chemistry World April 2, 2013 Kerek Lowe |
From lab to leader Here's a topic that always gets people arguing: how much of a scientist should the chief executive of a biopharma company be? |
Chemistry World July 1, 2014 Bibiana Campos Seijo |
Chemistry and art We often write about art-related chemistry, so this issue gives us an opportunity to analyze some of these stories in a bit more depth. |
Bio-IT World November 2006 Kevin Davies |
Building a Bridge Over Pharma with IT More than 100 enthusiastic delegates bridging the full breadth of the drug development pipeline gathered recently for the second annual Bridging Pharma and IT conference. Here are some highlights. |
Chemistry World November 9, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
Innovation in biomedical chemistry found wanting The pressure for researchers to publish or perish appears to be harming innovation in biomedicine and chemistry, according to research spearheaded by sociologist Jacob Foster from the University of California, Los Angeles |
Chemistry World January 4, 2008 Hepeng Jia |
China Allows Academics to Own Patents China has revised its 'science and technology constitution' to allow scientists, institutes and universities to own patents arising from publicly-funded research in an effort to boost innovation. |
Chemistry World March 2, 2011 Sarah Corcoran |
Natural products go with the flow Technology that could bring flow chemistry into the domain of complex natural product synthesis has been developed by UK scientists. |
Chemistry World March 1, 2014 Bibiana Campos Seijo |
European collaborations EuCheMS, the European Association for Chemical and Molecular Sciences, provides a single voice for chemistry in Europe. |