Showing posts with label Life Science Tools of the Trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Life Science Tools of the Trade. Show all posts

Thursday, February 03, 2011

Yet even more cross-posty goodness!

If anyone's interested, I've put up a new blog post at Life Science Tools of the Trade. Nothing earth-shattering, just some musings the complexity of high-throughput DNA sequencing data analysis, and the need for clean and clear visualization tools for the end user.

We'll be returning you to the regularly-scheduled wafflings about car racing, as soon as the weather warms up. In the meantime, the Canadian International AutoShow is coming, at the end of February. Stay tuned for the inevitable flood of photos.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

More Cross-Posty Goodness

Here's a little lazy blogging cross-posting: I've just put up a new post at yet another of my haunts, the Life Science Tools of the Trade blog. Actually, "haunt" is a good term, because I took it over from various other bloggers, all of whom have since disappeared. I swear I don't know where the bodies are hidden, really.

Over there, I'm whingeing again [So, going with your strengths then, are you? - Ed.] about the U.S. National Center for Biotechnology Information's venerable PubMed literature search engine, and how maybe, just maybe, Google Scholar is a better bet. Dear old PubMed is a tool that many (most? all?) scientists, at least those of a biomedical bent, are very used to using to find published articles. Unlike Google, it sits on top of a curated, and keyword-indexed, collection of relevant literature. Also unlike Google, it is completely unable to search inside articles using free text queries, and appears to occasionally be somewhat less than adept at finding things.

The post is here: PubMedically failing.