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23andMe DNA Mapping Reunites Long-Lost Siblings
CBS This Morning | Given up for adoption in 1960 at just 10 days, Neil Schwartzman suddenly traced his long-lost biological sister through the online DNA genotyping services of consumer genetics company 23andMe.
Jul 24, 2012
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Ion Torrent Named First Entrant in Genomics X Prize Competition
Bio-IT World | Organizers of the $10-million Archon Genomics X PRIZE competition, presented by Express Scripts, hope that the official entry of Ion Torrent will spur other next-gen sequencing hopefuls to sign up before the contest is held in September 2013.
Jul 22, 2012
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New York Genome Center Inks Lease on 6th Avenue
The Commercial Observer | The New York Genome Center has reportedly completed a deal to lease 150,000 square feet at 101 Avenue of the Americas.
Jul 20, 2012
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Human Genes as Company Property Tested by Myriad Patent Case
Bloomberg Businessweek | Madeleine Ball, a Harvard University geneticist, says entire regions of the human genome are at risk of becoming inaccessible to anyone who can’t afford to pay for patent licenses, stifling the information-sharing that is vital to scientific progress.
Jul 19, 2012
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Quantum Tunes Up StorNext For 'Big Data' Files
Tech Target | Quantum Corp., is updating its StorNext file management and archiving software to manage the velocity, volume and variety of 'Big Data' files in various verticals including life sciences.
Jul 18, 2012
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How to Get Along With Bioinformaticians
The Scientist | Even when bioinformaticians and classically trained biologists appreciate each other’s input, they don’t always understand each other’s work processes.
Jul 18, 2012
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Genomatix Maps Future Growth at Bench and Bedside
Bio-IT World | Genomatix, one of a rapidly growing number of software companies competing in the genome analysis, annotation and interpretation space, believes its traditional expertise in gene regulation and expression provides a distinct edge.
Jul 17, 2012
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Life Technologies Buys Navigenics for Genetic Diagnostics
Bloomberg Businessweek | Life Technologies has purchased closely held personal genomics company Navigenics, bolstering its ability to provide gene diagnostics in a fast-growing market, with an initial focus likely to be on cancer.
Jul 17, 2012
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INSIDE THE BOX: Solutions for Data Sharing in Life Sciences
Bio-IT World | INSIDE THE BOX -- Big data is not a new problem nor is it limited to biological sciences. Luckily, the commercial world has found some innovations in analytics that can teach us some lessons to help solve our own problems.
Jul 16, 2012
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Open Access to British Scientific Research in Two Years
The Guardian | The British government is to unveil controversial plans to make publicly funded scientific research immediately available for anyone to read for free by 2014, in the most radical shakeup of academic publishing since the invention of the internet.
Jul 16, 2012
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Allan Snavely, Architect of Gordon Supercomputer, Dies
HPC Wire | Allan Snavely, a widely recognized expert in high-performance computing whose innovative thinking led to the development of the Gordon supercomputer at the San Diego Supercomputer Center at UC San Diego, died of an apparent heart attack over the weekend.
Jul 16, 2012
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Better Medicine Brought to You by Big Data
GigaOM | Whether it’s Hadoop, machine learning, natural-language processing or some other technique, folks in the worlds of medicine and hospital administration understand that new types of data analysis are the key to helping them take their fields to the next level.
Jul 16, 2012
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The Skeptical Outsider: How to Rescue the Life Sciences from Technological Torpor
Bio-IT World | The Skeptical Outsider | Can a new generation of computational biologists cross-trained in the engineering disciplines, rescue the pharmaceutical industry, long overdue for change, asks Bill Frezza in his July 'Skeptical Outsider' column.
Jul 13, 2012
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Atul Butte, King of the Data Mountain
Stanford Medicine | Atul Butte, chief of systems medicine at Stanford University, has no lab in the orthodox sense, rather a warren of cubicles housing computers and anywhere from 10 to 25 people averaging a new publication every two weeks — from new uses for old drugs to insights into the genetics of diabetes.
Jul 13, 2012
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Big Data and One Man's Personal Health
Stanford Medicine |Stanford professor Mike Snyder compiled an integrative personal genomics profile, or iPOP, consisting of 30 terabytes of data or enough CD-quality audio to play non-stop for seven years -- to reveal in exquisite detail unforseen threats to his health.
Jul 13, 2012
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23andMe Nabs CureTogether to Boost Crowdsourced Genetic Research
TechCrunch | 23andMe announced that it is scooping up the four-year-old company CureTogether, a similarly-focused startup that aims to give people the tools needed to create their own research studies, learn about their health, and connect with experts and others who suffer from similar conditions.
Jul 12, 2012
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'Big Data' Journal GigaScience Makes Its Debut
Bio-IT World | Stressing new mechanisms to uphold the reproducibility of scientific results, the inaugural issue of the ‘big data’ open-access journal GigaScience and its companion database, GigaDB, is published this week.
Jul 12, 2012
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Complete Genomics Claims 99.99999% Accuracy with LFR Technology
Bio-IT World | Complete Genomics has published details of its Long Fragment Read (LFR) technology for whole genome sequencing in this week’s issue of Nature, which allows for full phasing of parental chromosomes and attains an overall genome sequencing accuracy of 99.99999%.
Jul 11, 2012
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Kari Stefansson on deCODE’s Alzheimer’s Discovery, Future Plans
Bio-IT World | In a detailed interview, deCODE Genetics CEO Kari Stefansson discusses the wide-ranging impact of his company's latest discovery -- a rare gene variant that protects against Alzheimer's disease with important drug development implications -- and what else his company can do now that it has sequenced or imputed the genomes of an entire nation.
Jul 11, 2012
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Genia Brin’s Double Parkinson’s Mutation
Moment Magazine | Eugenia Brin, mother of Google founder Sergey Brin, has an extremely rare form of Parkinson's disease -- she carries two copies of a faulty gene known as LRRK2.
Jul 10, 2012