Python for the Life Sciences is on the shelves and now a featured book at the MIT Coop Bookstore in Kendall Square, Cambridge, MA!
Read MoreStarting January 28th 2020, we will be teaching our course “Python For Life Scientists” at Boston Children’s Hospital.
Read MoreWe’re very grateful to all of our clients, collaborators and friends, for helping us have a wonderful 2019.
Read MoreA very happy Thanksgiving to all of our clients, collaborators, and friends.
Read More… and it’s now available with free 2-day delivery on Amazon Prime!
Read MoreOur book Python for the Life Sciences is now available on Amazon in both eBook and softcover formats.
Read MoreNow entering the second year of its exoplanet discovery survey, the TESS mission has exceeded all expectations in the year since since its launch.
Read MoreAlex Lancaster is a co-author on a paper in Nature Communications on the evolution of transcriptional networks through stochastic computational modeling.
Read MoreSimulations explore the role of the “Rock, Paper, Scissors” game in evolution and the maintenance of biodiversity
Read MoreIf we wish to “do” biology on computers, we face the same kind of challenges that the designers of programming languages have had to grapple with for decades.
Read MoreRonin Institute seminar on cellular modeling from Amber Biology’s Alex Lancaster is now up on the Institute’s YouTube channel
Read MoreAmber Biology’s unique Python for Life Scientists course expanding to 10-12 weeks.
Read MoreIn October of last year, Gordon gave a seminar on agent-based, stochastic modeling for The Ronin Institute.
Read MoreHere’s a simple but illuminating population dynamics model, the central algorithm for which can be implemented in only 5 lines of Python.
Read MoreHot off the press at The Digital Biologist is this tutorial on how to build a dynamic, agent-based model of a cell signaling network.
Read MoreAlex Lancaster will talk about Amber Biology & TESS at University of New England’s Kirby Observatory in New South Wales, Australia.
Read MoreIf you’re working in genomics or next-generation sequencing, don’t swallow the myth that Python is too slow for the kind of heavy computation that you need.
Read MoreAs this beautiful image with over 200,000 stars shows, the cameras on the NASA TESS spacecraft are now working and beaming images back to earth.
Read MoreThere are excellent reasons for biologists to consider looking beyond differential equations as their tool of choice for modeling and simulating biological systems.
Read MoreAmber Biology Partner, Alex Lancaster, will be presenting at the Statistical Bioinformatics Seminar at the Charles Perkins Centre at the University of Sydney.
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