For a full day the eight crime scenes became learning laboratories for law enforcement officers enrolled in criminal investigation courses offered by the Rhode Island State Crime Laboratory at the University of Rhode Island.
In this Q&A, five expert end-users from both academia and industry discuss the automated liquid handling systems they use in their labs, what they are used for, and how they went about choosing the systems.
From a utilitarian standpoint, it was inevitable that technology would redefine the processes of the modern lab. It began with the need to automate as suppliers realized they could help labs significantly improve their products by taking manual work out of the equation.
The Council for Chemical Research (CCR), a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing research in chemistry, chemical engineering and related disciplines, is proud to announce the 2012 recipients of the Collaboration Success Award.
The American College of Radiology’s (ACR) Radiology Leadership Institute™ (RLI) — radiology’s most comprehensive professional development and leadership academy — is now open for enrollment.
Creators of a nanotech-based system that captures carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere within a submarine have won the Federal Laboratory Consortium Interagency Partnership Award for 2012.
The San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) has announced a 10-week computational science program to provide a limited number of undergraduate students with paid, hands-on experience using Gordon, the center’s new data-intensive supercomputer.
Does your laboratory have “ethical muscle”? Do you feel your employees are flexing this muscle? Ethics and data integrity should be an integral part of your laboratory’s quality program.
Join Dr. Gayle Carson, author of the #7 bestselling business book on Amazon "Big Ideas for your Business" as well as "How to Get to the Top and Stay There," to learn the two dozen steps to making time work for you.
Boise State University and the Micron Foundation have teamed up to entice Idaho’s brightest science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) students into the state’s classrooms as a new generation of teachers who excel in technical subjects.