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Wired January 2003 Charles C. Mann |
The First Cloning Superpower Inside China's race to become the clone capital of the world.  |
Science News December 14, 2002 Janet Raloff |
Acrylamide -- From Spuds to Gingerbread Just in time for the holiday season, the Bavarian Ministry of Health reports finding extremely high concentrations of acrylamide -- a chemical that causes cancer in rats -- in gingerbread.  |
Bio-IT World December 10, 2002 Arielle Emmett |
Locus Focus Cheminformatics company Locus Discovery is a technology darling and an entrepreneur's dream, but it faces a dilemma over how much of its proprietary drug discovery software and data to reveal.  |
Bio-IT World December 10, 2002 |
Craig Venter Unvarnished (part II) The former Celera CEO covers privacy, ESTs, and his new research institutes.  |
Bio-IT World December 10, 2002 Malorye Branca |
The Trouble with Pharmaceutical Innovation There's a lot of one kind, but not enough of another in pharma land. Too many new technologies and too few new drugs -- that sums up the state of pharmaceutical R&D.  |
Bio-IT World December 10, 2002 Jim Hall |
21st Century R&D Strategy: Atlantic or Pacific? The biopharmaceutical sector is divided by two strategic perspectives.  |
Bio-IT World December 10, 2002 Rotem Sorek |
Alternative Splicing: Listen to the Mouse The completed mouse genome may help to finally pin down the size of the transcriptome.  |
Bio-IT World December 10, 2002 Kevin Davies |
The Wit and Wisdom of Uncle Syd This year, the Nobel Prize committee got it right by finally awarding a share of the physiology or medicine prize to Sydney Brenner, at the tender age of 75.  |
Bio-IT World December 10, 2002 Kevin Davies |
Do Try This @ Home In the most impressive sign of distributed computing's awesome potential in biology thus far -- at least in peer-review literature -- researchers have simulated the folding of a mini-protein on a microsecond timescale.  |
National Gardening Charlie Nardozzi |
Gardening Folklore has Scientific Roots This kind of folklore is often based on phenology: the relationship between the annual cycles of plants and animals and how they respond to seasonal changes in the environment. It turns out there is scientific basis for these observations.  |
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