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.
"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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