bioengineering
See the following -
Bioengineers use open source 3-D printer to create human organs
A group of bioengineers at Penn is one step closer toward the creation of full-fledged human organs in the laboratory.
- Login to post comments
BIOFAB - an Open Source Language for Programming Cells
Drew Endy is the co-director of the International Open Facility Advancing Biotechnology — BIOFAB, for short — where he’s part of a team that’s developing a language that will use genetic data to actually program biological cells. Read More »
- Login to post comments
EPFL Startup Explores New Directions In Open Access
The EPFL startup Frontiers announced today that it is launching 13 new open-access journals in fields including Physics, Bioengineering, and Public Health. These new titles will more than double Frontiers' current repertoire of twelve online journals whose peer-reviewed, scientific articles are immediately accessible, free of charge, to anyone. Read More »
- Login to post comments
Global 3D Printing In Medical Applications Market Is Expected To Reach USD 965.5 Million In 2019: Transparency Market Research
Transparency Market Research published new "3D Printing in Medical Applications Market - Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast, 2013 - 2019" market research report to its report store. Browse the report with TOC....
- Login to post comments
Open-Source Thinking Is Revolutionizing Medical Device Development
...As Moore’s Law brings down the cost of computing, and as consumer electronics become more sophisticated and yet cheaper, there are opportunities to use those advances to make medical devices that can serve the bottom of the pyramid...
- Login to post comments
OpenSim, Open-Source Software, Accurately Models Human Motion, Experts Say
In a new exhibit at The Leonardo, a science and technology museum in Salt Lake City, a team of Stanford engineers is demonstrating an open source software package called OpenSim that accurately models human movement. Read More »
- Login to post comments
Will Hackers Find Bioweapon Secrets In The Cloud?
The collision of big data and decoded genetic information is creating a wealth of opportunities for biologists, engineers and public health researchers. However, there is also the potential that advances in computing and genetics are providing potentially catastrophic opportunities for malefactors to hack into research computers to find information that could be adapted to create biological weapons.
- Login to post comments