Enables single researchers and smaller research groups to use high-end electronic laboratory notebooks with no need to invest in hardware, licenses or maintenance STOCKHOLM, Sweden, May 12 2009 - ...
Accessing and beginning to use your Electronic Research Notebook is easy. Follow the instructions below to get started, and refer to the Quick Start Guide if you need assistance. LabArchives is a ...
Laboratory managers have several responsibilities, including keeping a record of everything that happens, especially their findings. However, manually tracking reports and data using paper notebooks ...
Electronic laboratory notebooks (ELNs) were developed to keep track of experiments and data so that scientists could review their work in a single place and easily reproduce experiments. Many ELNs ...
Sapio ELN has been designed as the first no-code, no-SQL Electronic Lab Notebook for scientists rather than database engineers. Sapio allows users to focus on developing and deploying experiments, ...
In the field of materials science, even small variations in experimental parameters and protocols can lead to unwanted changes in the properties of a material. A ground-breaking development in this ...
WALTHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--PerkinElmer, Inc., a global leader focused on improving the health and safety of people and the environment, announced that its electronic laboratory notebook (ELN) ...
It seems like there are a good number of people around here working in research, so I thought I could get some good suggestions. Lately I've been thinking that using a electronic notebook could be ...
Sapio Sciences, the science-aware TM AI lab informatics platform, announced the launch of the world’s first 3rd-generation Electronic Lab Notebook (ELN) that thinks like a scientist, Sapio ELaiN. As ...
SAN DIEGO, May 20, 2013 -- /PRNewswire/ -- Accelrys, Inc. (NASDAQ: ACCL), a leading provider of scientific innovation lifecycle management software, has announced the latest release of the Accelrys ...
Scientists have long depended on pen and paper to record their observations, filling volumes of lab notebooks with their work. While Charles Darwin’s drawings and diagrams or Albert Einstein’s ...
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