Titanium

Jim Knight on "What We've Been Doing/Dealing with Since Last Year"

submitted by: JGI
Jim Knight of Roche Diagnostics discusses Roche's projects at the "Sequencing, Finishing, Analysis in the Future" meeting in Santa Fe, NM on May 28, 2009.

Tim Harkins on "The 8 day challenge for 8 genomes"

submitted by: JGI
Tim Harkins of Roche Diagnostics talks about what he calls "The Edwards & Eisen Challenge" at the "Sequencing, Finishing, Analysis in the Future" meeting in Santa Fe, NM on May 27, 2009.

Sergey Koren on "Celera Assembler and Automated Finishing"

submitted by: JGI
Sergey Koren from The J. Craig Venter Institute speaks at the "Sequencing, Finishing, Analysis in the Future" meeting in Santa Fe, NM on May 28, 2009.

New Generation Sequencing Technology Panel at SFAF - Part II

submitted by: JGI
From left to right: Haley Fiske of Illumina Inc., Steve Turner of Pacific Biosciences, Michael Rhodes of Applied Biosystems, Patrice Milos of Helicos Biosciences and Tim Harkins of Roche Diagnostics answer questions in a forum moderated by Bob Fulton at the "Sequencing, Finishing, Analysis in the Future" meeting in Santa Fe, NM on May 27, 2009. Part 2 of 2.

New Generation Sequencing Technology Panel at SFAF - Part I

submitted by: JGI
From left to right: Haley Fiske of Illumina Inc., Steve Turner of Pacific Biosciences, Michael Rhodes of Applied Biosystems, Patrice Milos of Helicos Biosciences and Tim Harkins of Roche Diagnostics answer questions in a forum moderated by Bob Fulton at the "Sequencing, Finishing, Analysis in the Future" meeting in Santa Fe, NM on May 27, 2009. Part 1 of 2.

Cliff Han on "Prescreening Illumina Data Results in High-Quality Genome Polishing"

submitted by: JGI
Cliff Han of the DOE Joint Genome Institute at Los Alamos National Laboratory, talks about modifying their bacterial genome sequencing process to accommodate new sequencing technologies at the "Sequencing, Finishing, Analysis in the Future" meeting in Santa Fe, NM on May 28, 2009.

Oricalco - thermal shape memory fabric

submitted by: GZE
The first orthogonal weaving example of Nitinol. The 'Thermal Shape Memory Alloy' is characterized by its extraordinary ability to recover any shape, pre-programmed, upon heating. Until today this light weight alloy with about 50% Titanium inside has been used in advanced sectors like space and recently in medical applications. Moreover this fabric is the first for which the shape memory alloy, named Nitinol, was weaved orthogonally - that is to say that Oricalco is the first fabric with...