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The 1000 Genomes Project and Not-So-Rare Rare Mutations
NY Genome | The 1000 Genomes project is revealing not-so-rare rare mutations. Of the 1,092 people from 14 populations currently sequenced, more than expected carry rare variations. Researcher theorize that the rate of population growth has exceeded the rate at which natural selection can remove problematic alleles.
Dec 7, 2012
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Intel, NVIDIA, and AMD: Battle of the Accelerators
HPC Wire | The competition for the newest high performance computing chips is heating up. Intel is shipping its Xeon Phi GPU competitior chips. NVIDIA has launched a new line of Kepler GPUs. And AMD has anew FirePro S10000 graphics card.
Dec 7, 2012
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BIOBASE to Distribute ANNOVAR Commercially
Herald Online | BIOBASE, in agreement the University of Southern California, and the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, will now distribute ANNOVAR, a tool for annotation of genomic variants, to commercial users as a standalone product or complement to Genome Trax.
Dec 6, 2012
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Disease- vs Target-Based Drug Discovery
Pharmalot | The former head of psychopharmacology at Boehringer Ingelheim, Frank Sams-Dodd, talks about the reason for pharma's decreased productivity, and the ways drug discovery are done that contribute to the problem.
Dec 6, 2012
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Uber-Cloud Experiment Provides Insight into Computing-as-a-Service
Bio-IT World Guest Commentary | After a fast-paced three months, Round 1 of the Uber-Cloud Experiment concluded last month, revealing roadblocks in the computing-as-a-service landscape, solutions, and setting the stage for Round 2, which launched December 1.
Dec 6, 2012
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Leveraging Private Cloud Technologies to Improve Prior Investments in Semantic Technologies and Data Warehouses
Bio-IT World Guest Commentary | Pharmaceutical R&D divisions normally possess a significant amount of warehoused legacy data that bears directly on other areas of the enterprise, where a better understanding and reuse of data can be beneficial from a cost and productivity standpoint. Getting that data out of legacy systems can be difficult, which is one of the reasons that semantic technologies have been sought. Now Cloud technologies can be leveraged to improve the computational issues facing semantic systems.
Dec 5, 2012
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George Scangos and Biogen Comeback
Forbes | Two years in, George Scangos is leading leads Biogen Idec's comeback story. He's cut costs and jobs and moved away from cancer research, but has invested in neuroscience and hemophilia.
Dec 5, 2012
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Boston Health System Launches Sequencing at Nine Hospitals
Boston Globe | Partners HealthCare System in Boston is launching a whole genome sequencing and interpretation service for patients at its nine hospitals across Eastern Massachusetts.
Dec 5, 2012
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Freely Available ALS Database Launched Today
Bio-IT World | A new patient database launched today containing clinical trial records from more than 8,500 ALS patients.
Dec 5, 2012
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AMD's New Processors Target the Cloud
Computerworld | AMD has introduced low-power Opteron processors targeted for Cloud use to power Web transactions: the Opteron 4300 and 3300 chips.
Dec 4, 2012
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GPUs Model Maturation of HIV
Bio-IT World | Thanks to a distributed computing platform of NVIDIA GPUs, bioinformaticians at IMIM (Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute) and UPF (Pompeu Fabra University) have used molecular simulation to explain a specific step in the maturation of HIV. The results were published in the most recent issue of PNAS.
Dec 3, 2012
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Sequencing Reveals Novel Mutations in Childhood Cancer
Science Codex | Researchers at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia have identified mutations in two related genes involved in neuroblastoma. The work was published yesterday in Nature Genetics.
Dec 3, 2012
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Flash Memory Gets Heat Shock Healing
BBC | Flash memory is fast, but it's long been known to have reliability issues after about 10,000 read/write cycles. Researchers in Taiwan have now shown that a 800C jolt of heat can "heal" the memory, making it good for up to 100 million cycles.
Dec 3, 2012
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Adaptive Study Design May Become Survival Tactic
Bio-IT World | In the not-so-distant future, the pharmaceutical industry will need to move away from serendipity and its “blockbuster” drug development approach to become a service-based business specializing in patient-specific therapeutics delivering desired outcomes at the desired price. Clinical trials, of necessity, will be re-engineered to reflect real-world circumstances and turn adaptive study programs into a competitive advantage. Practicing clinicians will be dissuaded from using high-cost medicines and more actively participate in modeling and simulation exercises to help get better products to patients sooner.
Dec 3, 2012
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Randy Scott: Bringing Metcalfe’s Law to Genomic Medicine
Bio-IT World | BOSTON—Receiving the 2012 Leadership in Personalized Medicine Award from the Personalized Medicine Coalition (PMC), Randy Scott reflected on his success as the founder and former CEO of Genomic Health, but also looked ahead to new opportunities with his latest venture, InVitae Corporation.
Nov 30, 2012
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HHMI Names New Vice President, CSO
HHMI | The Trustees of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute have elected Professor Erin K. O’Shea, Ph.D., now a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Harvard University, as Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer.
Nov 30, 2012
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Amazon Launches Redshift Data Warehouse
eWeek | Amazon Web Services launched a cloud data warehouse earlier in the week. Redshift is a petabyte-scale data warehouse service that provides a fast and powerful solution that increases the speed of query performance.
Nov 30, 2012
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Curing Cancer By Throwing Spaghetti At The Wall
Bio-IT World | The Skeptical Outsider | You know scientists are getting desperate when National Cancer Institute (NCI) researchers publicly boast that their approach is not limited to the realm of rational behavior. Heck, as long as funding is infinite, why not keep going back to re-drill the same dry holes hoping dumb luck will produce a gusher?
Nov 30, 2012
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Stanford Launches Genomics Center
Stanford Daily | Stanford University is launching the Stanford Center for Computational, Evolutionary and Human Genomics. The Center will reportedly specialize in the analysis of big data with a smaller emphasis on lab work.
Nov 29, 2012
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Numis Reiterates $2 Billion Valuation for Oxford Nanopore
Bio-IT World | An analyst with Numis Securities in London has reiterated a $2-billion valuation for Oxford Nanopore, even before the sequencing company has commercially launched, based on its assessment of the medical market and an evaluation of one of the British sequencing company’s major investors, the publicly traded IP Group.
Nov 29, 2012