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{bio,medical} informatics


Wednesday, April 09, 2003

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"For half a century, breakthroughs in computing have come from the predictable sources of federally funded aerospace and defense. During the past three decades, though, there's been a dramatic tilt in federally funded research toward the life sciences. That means the dividends from bleeding-edge computing that filter back to enterprise IT will be coming from a different source, along with new viewpoints: much needed because the old ways of looking at new IT problems are clearly reaching their limits."

"It may be hard, though, for application developers to see the connection between a Beowulf cluster that's processing gene sequences today and a distributed processing scheme for portfolio analysis tomorrow."



[ rhetoric ]

Bioinformatics will be at the core of biology in the 21st century. In fields ranging from structural biology to genomics to biomedical imaging, ready access to data and analytical tools are fundamentally changing the way investigators in the life sciences conduct research and approach problems. Complex, computationally intensive biological problems are now being addressed and promise to significantly advance our understanding of biology and medicine. No biological discipline will be unaffected by these technological breakthroughs.

BIOINFORMATICS IN THE 21st CENTURY

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