Similar Articles |
|
Bio-IT World April 15, 2003 |
Elementary, My Dear Watson The world celebrates the golden anniversary of the double helix. |
BusinessWeek July 19, 2004 Catherine Arnst |
James Watson and Francis Crick: Cracking The Code Of Life The 1953 discovery of the molecular structure of deoxyribonucleic acid, the building block of all life, transformed biology. And the Cold War and male chauvinism played roles in solving the DNA riddle |
Chemistry World May 21, 2015 Philip Ball |
How do we solve a problem like Marie? We need to talk about the lack of women in the history of science. I hope it's fair to say that everyone recognizes the problem. The question is what to do about it. |
Information Today December 1, 2015 John Charlton |
Digital Developments at the Wellcome Library The Wellcome Library, a medical-related archive (part of the Wellcome Trust charitable foundation), pays particular attention to the issues of data growth and obsolescence. |
Bio-IT World April 15, 2003 Kevin Davies |
Genes, Girls, and Honest Jim Honest Jim Watson remains as charming, humorous, obstinate, and outrageous as ever. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2013 Susan Hassler |
Genome to Go It's already possible to have your own genome sequenced. But personalized medicine based on sequencing still has a way to go |
Salon.com March 12, 2002 Alison Motluk |
"Genes, Girls and Gamow" by James D. Watson A brilliant biologist's embarrassing new memoir reveals that even with a Nobel prize under his belt, a 24-year-old geek finds it hard to get laid... |
Smithsonian March 2006 Simon Worrall |
Ben Franklin Slept Here Visitors can now experience the ingenious founding father's only surviving residence in London -- now reborn as a museum. |
Wired July 2001 |
Rants & Raves Giganotes... Remote Possibilities... Alarming News... Load-Bearing Stud... Cold Comfort... Cracking the Proteome... Mojo Rising... etc. |
Chemistry World June 2010 |
Column: The crucible Philip Ball welcomes the age of automated chemical crystallography |