snowdeal logo

archives archives

{bio,medical} informatics


Tuesday, April 27, 2004

bookmark: connotea :: del.icio.us ::digg ::furl ::reddit ::yahoo::

find related articles. powered by google. The Mercury News First across the gene pool

"Judging by the number of books recounting the complete sequencing of the human genome, this feat of late-20th-century scientific and fundraising prowess surely rates with the discoveries of Copernicus and Darwin.

Certainly, the major players in the drama routinely aired this and other grand claims during the great race to unravel the genome in the late 1990s. And the media obligingly repeated them.

Now we have another book recounting this tale of ego, cash and discovery."



[ 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

[ search ]

[ outbound ]

biospace / genomeweb / bio-it world / scitechdaily / biomedcentral / the panda's thumb /

bioinformatics.org / nodalpoint / flags and lollipops / on genetics / a bioinformatics blog / andrew dalke / the struggling grad student / in the pipeline / gene expression / free association / pharyngula / the personal genome / genetics and public health blog / the medical informatics weblog / linuxmednews / nanodot / complexity digest /

eyeforpharma /

nsu / nyt science / bbc scitech / newshub / biology news net /

informatics review / stanford / bmj info in practice / bmj info in practice /

[ schwag ]

look snazzy and support the site at the same time by buying some snowdeal schwag !

[ et cetera ]

valid xhtml 1.0?

This site designed by
Eric C. Snowdeal III .
© 2000-2005