Any scientist who uses email can now embark on novel research once considered advanced bioinformatics, says Biomatters of its freely-available Geneious software
Announcing the launch of Geneious 1.0, which is free to scientists, Daniel Batten, CEO of Biomatters, said, "We are excited about the software and the overwhelmingly enthusiastic response we have had from scientists to making bioinformatics tasks such as sequence alignment, tree building and sequence analysis user friendly".
"The two most common words in user feedback have been 'long awaited'".
The beta version was quickly adopted for university courses in Germany and Australia.
Debuting in the top three of Apple's Hot Picks, it also became the second most downloaded piece of software on Apple's Math and Science site.
In helping bioinformatics deliver on its promise, Batten said the team led by Alexei Drummond aimed to put advanced computer-based research into the hands of all molecular scientists as a first step towards radically faster and easier research.
"There's no shortage of clever algorithms.
"The problem has been that the majority of scientists can't access them," Batten said.
"The technology is locked up in bespoke systems, or requires specialist skills, or you have to cut and paste across several applications".
"For example, the workflow of Blasting sequences, viewing dotplots, conducting multiple alignment, building a phylogenetic tree and comparing annotations against gene similarity meant accessing specialist expertise or withstanding lots of repetitive manual operations".
"But using Geneious this work can all be done in a few clicks".
At the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hannover students unanimously voted Geneious number one for ease of use.
"Geneious pulls all key functions into the one package," Batten said.
"Using open plug-in API technology it also quickly incorporates updates".
"The system's phylogenetic tree viewer, for example, represented a lot of academic development but was integrated into Geneious in one day." The 1.0 version enables click-and-drag downloads of journals into local libraries, sequence searches on the fly, 3D protein structure viewing and a new way to view gene annotations and similarity at the same time.
Researchers can download Geneious 1.0 free.