December 4, 2006 - cGMP Informatics

IT Infrastructure Design for 21st Century Pharmaceutical Quality Control and Quality Assurance Operations

November 20, 2006 - Getting ready for a LIMS

Many of these suggestions are obvious: We have installed enough systems in different labs to see that it is important to review these requirements to help make the installation go as smoothly and rapidly as possible. These suggestions are applicable to any LIMS installation.

November 18, 2006 - The IT department's contribution to your LIMS implementation

Does this image represent the contribution of your IT department to your LIMS implementation?

November 8, 2006 - LIMS for Agriculture – What you do, What you need and How to get it

The following presentation provides a concise overview of what State Agricultural laboratories do; their importance in health, food and product safety and regulatory compliance.  The presentation further describes what functionality and features Agriculture labs need in a LIMS and how the LABLynx LIMS meets those requirements out of the box.

Click here to view the Presentation

(audio speakers are highly recommended)

 

November 7, 2006 - LIMS for Automotives

The flamboyant dexterity of Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) can be leveraged to serve the automotive world with the same adroitness and business acumen as it has exhibited to the pharmaceutical and petrochemical industry. In the automotive sector, the standpoint of LIMS as a system to record and report the quality of the automotive fluids on a regular basis is imperative for the maintenance of expensive machinery.

October 30, 2006 - Biometrics and Its Use in Forensics

This paper describes how biometrics is used in Forensics. It first gives a general introduction to biometrics desribing the main biometric technique of fingerprinting. hand geometry, eye/iris scans, and DNA. Then it gives an introduction of forensics with an example criminal case. Finally it discusses how biometrics is used in forensics, including an interesting handwriting example from the Ted Bundy case.

October 30, 2006 - Forensic Chemistry Laboratory Manual

I have found a pretty cool little site that is licensed under Creative Commons. This site provides an on-line Forensic Chemistry Laboratory Manual that covers, Alcohol, Arson, Drugs, Explosives, Fabrics, Glass and most other things that your typical Forensics lab will encounter.

October 30, 2006 - Not a tailor anymore…

In this global world of cookie cutter mass produced products, the modern LIMS can stand out from those that are hard coded to a particular use. Avoid purchasing a hard coded LIMS. You can have a tailor fit with the price and quality of mass production. Progressive LIMS companies can avoid the downside of globalization and prosper by providing data driven, configurable solutions that fit the laboratory's exacting needs.

October 24, 2006 - BxAF mLIMS: the only web-based solution for animal researchers

BxAF mLIMS (http://www.bioinforx.com/) is the only web-based solution for the need to organize laboratory animal-related information, such as mice, cages, animal events (mouse pregnancy, littering…), and animal-related research results.

October 23, 2006 - Web Services for Bioinformatics

It's interesting how books, papers and journals, the traditional open wares of academia and the sciences are slowly being succumbed by first open source scientific applications, and now open data web services.

October 23, 2006 - A Polite Software Product, a sure sign of sophistication

Software is becoming more sophisticated. A truly civilized piece of software will destroy your data with a nice and polite message.

October 23, 2006 - Challenges in Selecting, Qualifying and Validating Pharmaceutical Data Acquisition and LIMS Systems

This presentation covers the selection process through defining User Requirements Specification (URS) and proceeds to system qualification and validation. This presentation provides a good outline from a users perspective.

October 23, 2006 - History of LIMS

This presentation give a very concise history of Laboratory Information Management Systems (LIMS). The presentation covers, what is a LIMS, advantage, disadvantages, the future of LIMS and whole lot more...

October 23, 2006 - The Human Metabolome Project

Freely web accessible database providing detailed information on metabolites, chemistry, enzymes, diseases and pathways.

October 20, 2006 - Leading the LIMS industry through innovation

LABLynx, Inc. was the first Laboratory Informatics provider to deliver a true browser-based Laboratory Information Management Solution in 1997. View this presentation to learn more about LABLynx and what makes us the LIMS industry leader with innovations that keep us at the forefront.

October 15, 2006 - LIMSfinder.com RSS Feeds

The following is a list of RSS feeds for the LIMSfinder site.

September 25, 2006 - Open Source Beer vs. Open Source LIMS; which one do you prefer?

A year ago, some enterprising lads at the IT University of Copenhagen released a recipe of beer under the Creative Commons license. Because of the license, anybody that made money from selling the beer would need to give them credit and publish any changes to the recipe under a similar license. It was a novel idea and got some press from both the Open Source and the beer brewing communities. But just like many applications in the Open Source world, getting an Open Source beer recipe is the first (and usually easiest) step in a long, involved, sometimes unpleasant, process. And I hope that anybody making Open Source anything takes criticism really well....

September 25, 2006 - Creative Commons / Science Commons – Key to sharing scientfic knowledge

Have you started noticing a little symbol called "Creative Commons" showing up on numerous on-line publications, including this blog? This little icon is being adopted more and more by publishers on the Internet, especially in the scientific community. Creative Commons is helping to guarantee the free and open access to vital scientific information and publications.

September 24, 2006 - Genomes as geography: using GIS technology to build interactive genome feature maps

Many commonly used genome browsers display sequence annotations and related attributes as horizontal data tracks that can be toggled on and off according to user preferences. Most genome browsers use only simple keyword searches and limit the display of detailed annotations to one chromosomal region of the genome at a time. We have employed concepts, methodologies, and tools that were developed for the display of geographic data to develop a Genome Spatial Information System (GenoSIS) for displaying genomes spatially, and interacting with genome annotations and related attribute data.

September 23, 2006 - The Tragedy of Bugglet

An ode to all of those that must suffer the slings and arrows of the not so perfect world of LIMS. It does not matter whether your software is large or small, old or young, it is guaranteed to have the ubiquitous Bugglet.