genome

12 Results

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  • Disk Performance Analyzer for Networks

    What's slowing your network down? Find out fast with powerful, free software that gives you a network-wide at-a-glance view of fragmentation accumulation. Discover bottlenecks before they cost you...

  • Amazon Web Services, NIH: 1000 Genomes Project now publically available

    The collection of genetic variations weighs in at 200 terabytes and DNA sequenced from 1,700 people.

    Blog posts | March 29, 2012 6:00am PDT

  • Should your genes be open source?

    The arguments should be familiar to everyone involved in controversies involving software patents and open source. Are patent rights on genes necessary to innovation, or are they in fact a hindrance?

    Blog posts | July 20, 2009 8:27am PDT

  • Amazon puts human genome, other data sets in the cloud

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) on Thursday said it will publish data sets such as the Human Genome, U.S. Census and labor statistics to its cloud to make the information easier to access for...

    Blog posts | December 4, 2008 2:01am PST

  • What IBM rice study may teach us about people

    Certainly genetic coding did not reveal what makes us tick. Perhaps decoding genes based on protein interactions will do the job. The Samudrala study may be the first step toward a new...

    Blog posts | May 19, 2008 9:07am PDT

  • Can Fox' genome help cure Parkinson's?

    "The existing model for clinical research does not have access to a large enough pool of study participants to identify the cause and early indicators of Parkinson’s disease," says the press...

    Blog posts | May 14, 2008 6:10am PDT

  • Wikinomics 5: The New Alexandrians

    Time once again for an installment in the long-running <italic>Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything</italic> saga, in which we analyze Don Tapscott's startling...

    Blog posts | February 21, 2008 8:11am PST

  • Life in extreme environments

    U.S. biologists have developed a model mapping the control circuit governing a bacteria named Halobacterium salinarum, which can live in extremely salty environments, and that can survive to...

    Blog posts | December 30, 2007 9:08am PST

  • The importance of gene targeting and persistence

    This year's Nobel Prize in Medicine went to the discovery of "gene targeting," which is now a vital technique not just in isolating diseases to specific genomes but in producing study subjects.

    Blog posts | October 9, 2007 8:22am PDT

  • Today's Debate: Are genetic tests a threat?

    Without rules, genetic tests are leaking out and people are being hurt. With rules, a mass market in genetic data would likely result. Would that be worse?

    Blog posts | October 2, 2007 6:24am PDT

  • Esther Dyson is posting her genome on the Web; Will you follow?

    In a Wall Street Journal editorial Esther Dyson outlines how she will post her genome, medical history and health questionnaire for the world to see on the Web. Will you follow? Dyson, an...

    Blog posts | July 25, 2007 8:50am PDT

  • How the Cancer Genomic Atlas will work

    The Cancer Genomic Atlas will have a heavy information technology component as it crunches data to map the cancer genome.

  • The next little thing: replacing oil

    J. Craig Venter is back with a new project: designing a bioengineered microbe that will allow sea plants to generate ethanol. And he's picked a top government scientist to join him.

    Blog posts | February 27, 2006 12:14pm PST

Additional Results

  • Feds, big tech bolster Materials Genome Initiative

    The MGI aims to encourage public and private collaboration to get turn these materials into products faster.

    Blog posts | May 14, 2012 8:04am PDT

  • Amazon Web Services, NIH: 1000 Genomes Project now publically available

    The collection of genetic variations weighs in at 200 terabytes and DNA sequenced from 1,700 people.

    Blog posts | March 29, 2012 6:00am PDT

  • Should your genes be open source?

    The arguments should be familiar to everyone involved in controversies involving software patents and open source. Are patent rights on genes necessary to innovation, or are they in fact a hindrance?

    Blog posts | July 20, 2009 8:27am PDT

  • Amazon puts human genome, other data sets in the cloud

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) on Thursday said it will publish data sets such as the Human Genome, U.S. Census and labor statistics to its cloud to make the information easier to access for...

    Blog posts | December 4, 2008 2:01am PST

  • LHC, Genomics and the era of massive data sets

    The world won't end when the Large Hadron Collider makes its anticipated first collision of high-energy particles later this month, but it will produce an explosion of data. The LHC will produce...

    Blog posts | September 11, 2008 10:37am PDT

  • What IBM rice study may teach us about people

    Certainly genetic coding did not reveal what makes us tick. Perhaps decoding genes based on protein interactions will do the job. The Samudrala study may be the first step toward a new...

    Blog posts | May 19, 2008 9:07am PDT

  • Can Fox' genome help cure Parkinson's?

    "The existing model for clinical research does not have access to a large enough pool of study participants to identify the cause and early indicators of Parkinson’s disease," says the press...

    Blog posts | May 14, 2008 6:10am PDT

  • Wikinomics 5: The New Alexandrians

    Time once again for an installment in the long-running <italic>Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything</italic> saga, in which we analyze Don Tapscott's startling...

    Blog posts | February 21, 2008 8:11am PST

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