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Bio-IT World February 2007 Mike May |
No Limits: The New Look of LIMS As vendors and scientists work towards standardized data formats and improving the tracking of research and results worldwide, laboratory information management systems can pull increasingly more complex sources of information into managing knowledge. |
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 June 17, 2004 Salvatore Salamone |
LIMS: To Buy or Not to Buy? When it comes to laboratory information management systems, IT experts face a dilemma: to build their own or buy a commercial product. Some are turning to a third solution. |
Bio-IT World November 19, 2004 Mark D. Uehling |
Applied Bio, Ocimum Stretch Their LIMS Vendors try to make labware sing, adding ERP, multiplatform, and project-management features. |
Bio-IT World August 18, 2004 Salvatore Salamone |
Tracking Better Lab Operations Baylor College of Medicine's laboratory information management system (LIMS) has given Microarray Core Facility (MCF) workers a centralized database that simplifies tracking and enables better service delivery to researchers and fewer administrative tasks for staff. |
Bio-IT World August 2005 Johan Bostrom |
Agilent Acquisitions Bolster Portfolio of Products A string of acquisitions is helping Agilent Technologies establish itself as a major player in informatics for analytical laboratories, and its expanding product portfolio has made it a serious player in laboratory analysis automation and software integration. |
Bio-IT World December 15, 2004 |
Sourcebook: Laboratory Information Management Systems One result of the past year's mad merger activity in the pharma industry is that companies are re-evaluating their laboratory systems, looking to standardize on one Laboratory Information Management System that supports global business practices. |
Bio-IT World June 2006 |
3rd Millennium Goes Out on a LIMS Commercial laboratory information systems have a bad reputation. Conventional wisdom is they are expensive and too rigid. Now, a small previously consulting-only company is changing that with their award-winning offering for microarray research. |
Bio-IT World January 21, 2005 Laura Lane |
Speed It Up Although mostly used for manufacturing and pharmaceutical research, automated devices are becoming increasingly common in academia and small labs. |
Bio-IT World August 2005 Steven Withrow |
Harvard's Personalized Medicine Gateway With the right tools -- an enterprise-level, integrated infrastructure, for example -- an IT department can accelerate genetic and genomic science from discovery through clinical care. |
Bio-IT World February 11, 2005 Mark D. Uehling |
New Software for HTS Discovery tools: a Columbia University laboratory information system named SLIMS (Small Laboratory Information System) picks old drug for new disease, spinal muscular atrophy. |
The Motley Fool May 25, 2007 Tom Taulli |
STARLIMS' Dim Reception The laboratory software developer's growth prospects weren't enough for IPO investors. |
Bio-IT World August 18, 2004 Judy Hanover |
Do ASPs Work for Life Science? Clinical trial data management is a natural fit for the application service providers (ASP) model. But ASPs have not been successful with bioinformatics tools. |