As usual, silence from our end means that we are busy working on making Bioscreencast.com an even better experience. So keep your eyes on this page, since we have a couple of really cool updates up our sleeves. In the meantime you might want to check out some screencasts about MYourScience, UniProt and OWL... lire la suite
As usual, silence from our end means that we are busy working on making Bioscreencast. com an even better experience. So keep your eyes on this page, since we have a couple of really cool updates up our sleeves.
recent biomed, conferences, art and biomed Rethinking representational practices in contemporary art and modern life sciences If you happen to be in Berlin next week, you are welcome to take part in the session ‘Rethinking Representational Practices in Contemporary Art and Modern Life Sciences’ at the 5th Biannual European Conference of the Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts (SLSA).
What Happened Last Year Over 375 registrants! HLS technical and solutions sessions partners participated Overview This event will offer developers, architects, technical and business decision makers in the healthcare industry a chance to learn how Microsoft is making a big bet in the enablement and delivery of Software + Services in Health & Life Sciences.
Who is this smiley guy? We'll tell you at our next Industry Council: The Scientist Workbench - will you be there? Our Life Sciences team continues to improve its Industry Center: you can find architecture guidance and technical material for CIOs, CTOs, Developers and Systems Architects in the life sciences industry.
Who is this smiley guy? We'll tell you at our next Industry Council: The Scientist Workbench - will you be there? Our Life Sciences team continues to improve its Industry Center: you can find architecture guidance and technical material for CIOs, CTOs, Developers and Systems Architects in the life sciences industry.
conferences, art and biomed D-visualization in the life sciences — useful ideas for medical museum curators In May last year a workshop on visualizations in the life sciences (”Graphing Genes, Cells and Embryos”) was held in Naples. The papers included a number of historical studies of interest for displaying biomedicine in a museum context, including studies of the history of:
Excitement is building up for the annual Microsoft Health & Life Sciences Developer and Solutions Conference. Check this teaser for what's in store at the conference. This is a unique conference sponsored by Microsoft (my team, US HLS Industry Group, Worldwide Pharma Industry Group, HSG, and Microsoft partners and customers)
Register today as space is limited! The conference is FREE. Some meals are provided. Kosher for Passover meals are available upon request. You are responsible for all other travel and hotel expenses. Accommodations For your convenience, a block of rooms has been reserved at the Sheraton Hotel at a rate of $129.
Thanks to everyone who attended my AJAX Sessions at the Microsoft Health & Life Sciences Developer's Conference in Atlantic City last week. Here are links to the PowerPoints and Demos ASP. NET AJAX Security [Demo Code] [PowerPoint Deck] ASP. NET AJAX Patterns [Demo Code] [PowerPoint Deck]
Thanks to everyone who attended my talk about the new ASP. NET MVC framework at the Health & Life Sciences Developer Conference in Atlantic City last week! I've posted my slides for viewing up on SkyDrive: Credit goes to Scott Hanselman as I borrowed heavily from his MVC presentation at Mix 08 earlier this year.
Almost a year ago, I wrote NextBio was just like using Pubmed but in a more dynamic way. Now the public version was launched so it’s free for everyone. With NextBio, in just one click users can search through thousands of studies with billions of data points spanning across different experimental platforms, organisms and data types.
recent biomed, art and biomed Is the microarray replacing DNA as the icon for biomedicine and the life sciences? For example, the new Center for Protein Research at the University of Copenhagen—funded for a ten-year period with 600 mill. DKK (~120 mill. USD) by the Novo Nordisk Foundation and fully operative some time in 2009—has just presented their logo:
recent biomed, new books etc, history of medicine, book review Craig Venter's A Life Decoded – a captivating read for adult boys (and for historians of the contemporary life sciences) Most autobiographies of scientists are terribly boring—soulless accumulations of facts of hardly any interest for others than the near family combined with humourless vindications of the author's inflated ego—best used as temporary cures against insomnia.
recent biomed, conferences Conference on the politics of the life sciences (biopolitics, biocitizenship, etc. The BIOS Centre at the LSE is organizing a conference about the politics of the life sciences in an ‘age of biological control’, 16-18 September next year (i. e. The organisers are particularly interested in papers that develop the following three themes:
Health & Life Sciences Evangelism Team in the Far East. our 6 week adventure begins today! Over the next 6 weeks, Hong Choing (Microsoft Healthcare colleague) and I will be doing a work rotation @ Microsoft's Beijing China offices During this journey, we will work with Healthcare & Life Sciences entities throughout China, Hong Kong, Korea, and Japan.
conferences, history of science, history of technology, history of medicine Has the emergence of the life sciences reconfigured C. P. Snow’s two-cultures thesis? Next year is 50 years since C. P. Snow delivered his famous lecture ‘The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution', suggesting that as cultured citizens we need to know as much about the second law of thermodynamics as the plays of Shakespeare.
Caliper Life Sciences, Inc. CALP)
The January update to the Technical Computing @ Microsoft site (www. microsoft. com/science) is up: Spotlighting the SwissEx Collaboration with EPFL. A feature entitled “Determining Fundamental Principles of RNA Structure with Comparative Sequence Analysis” about Dr. Robin Gutell (University of Texas at Austin) and the MSR collaboration (Stuart Ozer) around the use of SQL Server.
The January update to the Technical Computing @ Microsoft site (www. microsoft. com/science) is up: Spotlighting the SwissEx Collaboration with EPFL. A feature entitled “Determining Fundamental Principles of RNA Structure with Comparative Sequence Analysis” about Dr. Robin Gutell (University of Texas at Austin) and the MSR collaboration (Stuart Ozer) around the use of SQL Server.
Advanced Life Sciences Holdings, Inc., Q4 2007 Earnings Call Transcript