![]() Other vendors also are releasing apps that enhance the use of particular instruments, such as Thermo Fisher Scientific’s NanoDrop User app for iPad. ![]() For example, the Biostat A app (for iOS and Android) supports the company’s Lab-Bioreactor Biostat A instrument. “Now customers have a close look at the ‘added value’ clearly appreciate if an app makes their daily life more efficient and convenient.” Sartorius’ newer apps include functions such as data analysis and remote control of lab instruments. “The ‘hype’ about apps in general is over,” says Baumfalk. Reinhard Baumfalk, vice president of R&D in instrumentation and control at Sartorius Lab Instruments, says customers are becoming more discerning when it comes to apps. Useful new apps are popping up continually-here’s a brief scan of some new apps from 2015, and how they are assisting scientists to get through their daily research challenges. The number of apps for smartphones and tablets is increasing exponentially, as these devices become smarter and increasingly ubiquitous in researchers’ lives. Have you been hearing “There’s an app for that!” more often inside the lab than out? If so, it’s for good reason. in neuroscience from Yale University, and completed postdoctoral work at the Vollum Institute.
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