tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36768584.post6143125205022560253..comments2024-03-03T18:49:34.382-05:00Comments on Omics! Omics!: iGenomX Riptide Kits Promise a Sea of DataKeith Robisonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04765318239070312590noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36768584.post-36532204378276105472017-10-23T04:40:41.458-04:002017-10-23T04:40:41.458-04:00nucacidhunter
To be a useful product for sequenci...nucacidhunter<br /><br />To be a useful product for sequencing small genome libraries on NovaSeq they have to come up with improvements to enable identifying reads resulting from index hopping.nucacidhunterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12107158220739685860noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-36768584.post-46411307032965590672017-10-13T16:24:42.971-04:002017-10-13T16:24:42.971-04:00Nice write-up Keith!
Your comment about "spe...Nice write-up Keith!<br /><br />Your comment about "spectacular creativity" in the library creation world reminds me of the poster that Jacques Reteif put together several years ago. (Looking over it now, it was from 2014 and was entitled 'For all you seq...' and had sections with cartoons on the methods, such as RNA Transcription, RNA Low-level detection, Methylation, DNA-Protein Interactions etc.)<br /><br />Looks like that great poster has now been reduced to an online tool. Easier to scale, yes, but it was something to see the dozens (or was it over a hundred?) methods in one huge graphic. https://www.illumina.com/science/sequencing-method-explorer.htmlDale Yuzukihttp://www.yuzuki.orgnoreply@blogger.com