• NetApp Eyes Opportunities in Health Care Data Storage

    Bio-IT World | Whatever happened to NetApp? When Bio-IT World launched in 2002, NetApp was one of the big names in big data storage in the biotech and life sciences arena. But over the past decade, while brand names such as Isilon, EMC, BlueArc, Quantum, Panasas, DDN and many others have cashed in on the data deluge, NetApp kept at best a very low profile in the space. But there are strong signs that NetApp is turning things around.

    Feb 1, 2013
  • Selventa Says Systems Diagnostics is Key to Harnessing Patient Data

    Bio-IT World | To hear any CEO claim that their company has become “the premier big data analytics company focused on personalized healthcare” might raise an eyebrow or two. When the company in question is a small software firm that underwent a name change just 18 months ago, that is certainly the case.

    Jan 31, 2013
  • Life Tech Helps ID Libyan Remains

    U-T San Diego | Life Technologies is assisting in an effort to identify tens of thousands of remains found in mass graves in Libya. Life Tech is donating infrastructure, including the expertise, training, and the forensic instruments and materials to validate the workflow and process DNA samples from about 20,000 people.

    Jan 30, 2013
  • PLOS and Dryad Assign DOIs to PLOS Genetics Articles

    PLOS Blog | PLOS and Dryad are expanding their integration to PLOS Genetics. The partnership applies data identiers (DOIs) to data "packages" associated with published articles so authors, editors, and readers can access underlying data along with the published results.

    Jan 30, 2013
  • Computational Challenges of Protein Function Prediction

    News Brief | A worldwide effort encompassing 102 researchers and students from 30 research groups working over 2 years tackled the computational challenges of protein function prediction. The results were published this week in Nature Methods.

    Jan 29, 2013
  • Oracle's IaaS Plans

    InformationWorld | Oracle shared their infrastructure-as-a-service plan yesterday in a conference call with the press. The plan would boost the company's hardware usage while building its cloud subscription numbers.

    Jan 29, 2013
  • Bio-IT World Expo Preview: Managing Big Data on Genome’s 10th Anniversary

    Bio-IT World | This April welcomes the return of the Bio-IT World Expo in Boston (April 9-11, 2013). Over the course of three days, researchers from academia and industry will discuss themes of big data, cloud computing, trends in IT infrastructure, omics technologies, high-performance computing, data analytics and precision medicine, from the research realm to the clinical arena.

    Jan 29, 2013
  • In Conversation: Ashley Van Zeeland, CEO Cypher Genomics

    Bio-IT World | The genome interpretation field gets a little more interesting this week with the news that Cypher Genomics, a software start-up co-founded by a notable quartet of Scripps Institute physicians and scientists, is launching its beta access program. The San Diego company was launched by cardiologist Eric Topol, mathematical geneticist Nicholas Schork, bioinformatician Ali Torkamani, and neuroscientist Ashley Van Zeeland, the company’s CEO. Bio-IT World editor Kevin Davies recently spoke to Van Zeeland to learn about the company’s goals and core strengths.

    Jan 28, 2013
  • Broad Updates GATK Licenses

    Bio-IT World Roundup | The Broad has again updated their GATK licenses. In October, Broad announced that commercial users of the GATK would need commercial licenses from Appistry to use GATK 2.0. The move drew complaints from the community.

    Jan 28, 2013
  • Hadoop to be in Most Advanced Analytics by 2015

    Computerworld | A Gartner study says the Hadoop programming framework will be the dominant framework in large-scale data analytics by 2015.

    Jan 25, 2013
  • January Product and News Briefs

    Bio-IT World | Briefs for January include news briefs from ERT, Flatiron Health, ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Mayo Clinic, CDISC; new products from PerkinElmer; and more.

    Jan 25, 2013
  • Batten Disease Finding Ends a Diagnostic Odyssey for California Family

    Bio-IT World EXCLUSIVE | Three years after Jacob Allingham first began experiencing seizures that worsened into a bewildering and quickly progressing combination of symptoms, the exhausting (and exorbitant) diagnostic odyssey for Jacob and his similarly affected younger brother Dylan has come to an end.

    Jan 24, 2013
  • Salk Institute Gets $42 Million for Genomics Center

    UT San Diego | The Salk Institute in La Jolla has received $42 million gift from the New York-based Helmsley Charitable Trust that will be used to explore the genomics behind cancer, diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease.

    Jan 23, 2013
  • David Cox, Genomics Leader, Dies

    Bio-IT World | David Cox, a geneticist and senior vice president at Pfizer, died yesterday. Cox was involved in early efforts to sequence the human genome, served as the chief scientific officer for Perlegen, and led Pfizer's genetics research efforts in the Rinat office.

    Jan 23, 2013
  • New HIPAA Rules Increase IT Responsibility

    eWeek | A new HIPAA update will make IT companies more liable for data breaches. Business associates—which includes  software developers and data backup services—now must meet the privacy and security rules of HIPAA just like doctors, hospitals and health insurance providers.

    Jan 22, 2013
  • Picking the Right NGS Supplier

    Opiniomics Blog | All NGS suppliers are not created equal says Mick Watson, manager of a genomics facility at the University of Edinburgh, in a blog post. Data quality can vary dramatically between instruments, teams, and offerings; Watson breaks down what to look for to make sure you're getting the best work for your money.

    Jan 21, 2013
  • New Company Offers Genetic Panel for Parents

    San Francisco Business Journal | Randy Scott's company InVitae is beta testing a panel of genetic conditons--150 now, up to 500 by the end of the year--that parents could use to know what diseases their children may be exposed to.

    Jan 21, 2013
  • Moleculo Man: Mickey Kertesz on Illumina’s Sub-Assembly Acquisition

    Bio-IT World | You could have gotten pretty long odds on a major genomics company snapping up a stealth start-up less than one year old, named after a Saturday Night Live character and without a scientific publication to its name. But last month, Moleculo co-founders Mickey Kertesz and Dmitry Pushkarev sold their San Francisco start-up to Illumina. The prize was a proprietary technology—part wet-lab, part computation—for greatly increasing the assembled virtual read-length of short-read next-gen sequencing data, addressing a short-coming in Illumina’s second-generation HiSeq and MiSeq instruments.

    Jan 18, 2013
  • Jackson Lab Breaks Ground on Genomic Medicine Center

    UConn Today | The Jackson Lab has broken ground on its new Connecticut buildings--The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine. The new center will support research collaborations aiming to uncover genomic causes of human diseases and shape new approaches in personalized medicine to prevent, detect, and treat them. 

    Jan 18, 2013
  • New Data Analysis Company Takes on Shape of Data

    New York Times | Ayasdi, a new data analysis start-up based in Palo Alto, is based on a new fundamental technique of mathmatics analysis. The technique analyzes the shape of complex data.

    Jan 18, 2013