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simplifying spatial and molecular profiling with end to end services

A visual guide to streamlining high-plex, high-throughput workflows
Simplifying Spatial and Molecular Profiling with End-to-End Services
Canopy Biosciences | Sep 20, 2022 | 1 min read
A visual guide to streamlining high-plex, high-throughput workflows
The Guide to Products and Services
The Scientist Staff | Oct 15, 1995 | 5 min read
Still typing bibliographies by hand? Let EndNote do it for you. Join more than 85,000 researchers who use EndNote. Comes with more than 240 journal styles. EndLink comes with 140 filters to import from online services and CD-ROMs. Windows or Macintosh. NILES & ASSOCIATES, Inc. (800) 554-3049 FAX (510) 559-8683 e-mail info@niles.com Instrument Catalog The new, free 1995-1996 Cole-Parmer instrument catalog contains over 1700 full-color pages and features more than 40,000 products covering scient
All's Well that Ends Well: A Profile of Specialty Microwell Plates
Brent Johnson | Sep 26, 1999 | 10+ min read
Date: September 27, 1999Table of Specialty Microplates The story of the microplate is one of those tales of history that either has been forgotten or was never clearly understood. According to Barry Lazar of Dynex Technologies, formerly Dynatech Laboratories, the origin of what is now commonly referred to by Dynex's registered trademark of Microtiter plates began with Gyola Takatsy, a Hungarian-born scientist who was trying to scale down serology tests. His first prototype became available in 1
A bat flying in a dark cave
Turning on the Bat Signal
Hannah Thomasy, PhD | Mar 15, 2024 | 10+ min read
Scientists around the world investigate how bat immune systems cope with viral attacks and how this information could be used to keep humans safe.
Nonacus introduces ExomeCG product to simplify molecular and cytogenomics data generation and interpretation
NONACUS | Oct 18, 2019 | 2 min read
New capture kit product will enable whole exome sequencing and targeted copy number analysis in a single assay
Powerful Programs Simplify Molecular Modeling
Lisa Simon | Dec 9, 1990 | 7 min read
The first molecular modeling software, developed at Columbia University in the mid-1960s by the late Cyrus Levinthal (see page 28), was capable of displaying and manipulating complex molecules in two dimensions. By the mid-1970s, at the University of California, San Francisco, molecular modeling had been taken to a new level by Robert Langridge, Michael Connelly, and Peter Coleman, with more sophisticated, three-dimensional graphics and new manipulative capabilities, including the ability to po
Simplifying Nucleic Acid Extraction and Cutting Down Waste
The Scientist Creative Services Team in collaboration with MilliporeSigma | Mar 29, 2021 | 2 min read
A new approach to nucleic acid extraction efficiently frees RNA and DNA in just three steps, giving scientists back their precious time.
Agena Bioscience Introduces Front-End Automation for Its MassARRAY® System
Agena Bioscience | Aug 23, 2015 | 2 min read
New Chip Prep Module Streamlines Workflow and Reduces Hands-On Time.
Mega Multiplexing for Exploring Diseased Tissues
Niki Spahich, PhD | Oct 16, 2023 | 4 min read
Researchers at KU Leuven specialize in performing a multiplex immunohistochemistry method that uses conventional antibodies and pathologist-driven data analysis.

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