Boot camp not withstanding, home sequencing is quite cool. Old-fashioned in glass. @nanopore pic.twitter.com/GINg3nexcE
— Nick Loman (@pathogenomenick) June 23, 2014
"One scientist this month tweeted a picture of the sequencer on his dining room table, decoding DNA."
Radical New DNA Sequencer Finally Gets into Researchers’ Hands http://t.co/ZVP5B8cgyf
— MIT Tech Review (@techreview) September 18, 2014
Having your genome sequenced at your own request or initiative is forbidden by law in France. L.O.L.
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"David Deamer made this sketch in 1989 when the idea for nanopore sequencing came to him. One day in 1989, biophysicist David Deamer pulled his car off California’s Interstate 5 to hurriedly scribble down an idea. In a mental flash, he had pictured a strand of DNA threading its way through a microscopic pore. Grabbing a pen and a yellow pad, he sketched out a radical new way to study the molecule of life. Twenty-five years later, the idea is now being commercialized as a gene sequencing machine that’s no larger than a smartphone, and whose effects might eventually be similarly transformative." Source.
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L'Agence de la biomédecine interdit au citoyen de faire séquencer son génome et nationalise ses organes. Cf Banksy ;) pic.twitter.com/L5WTomIqVW
— CATHERINE COSTE (@cathcoste) September 21, 2014
French Agency of Biomedicine says requesting your genome sequencing is illegal but consent to organ donation written in French law. Biased.
— CATHERINE COSTE (@cathcoste) September 21, 2014
L'agence de la biomédecine interdit au citoyen de faire séquencer son génome mais le consentement au don de nos organes inscrit dans la loi.
— CATHERINE COSTE (@cathcoste) September 21, 2014
La loi interdit 2 faire séquencer son génome en FRA ->je le fais moi-même,à ma table 2 cuisine http://t.co/Ewgrt9dz7T pic.twitter.com/PJTnhSLzS0
— CATHERINE COSTE (@cathcoste) September 21, 2014
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