Expanded ChemOffice WebServer applications from CambridgeSoft are now ready to help biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and chemical firms manage extensive research data
These electronic systems organize records and documents using CambridgeSoft's ChemOffice WebServer, a web-based scientific application development and deployment system that works with standard internet communication protocols, leading storage systems such as Oracle Cartridge and SQL Server, and other enterprise information systems.
E-Notebook Enterprise streamlines the daily record-keeping of research scientists.
Notebook pages consist of Excel spreadsheets, Word documents, ChemDraw drawings, and spectral data, and can be searched by text and structure.
Oracle or SQL support allows organizations to share data, as well as maintain rigorous security and efficient archiving.
Document Manager provides ChemFinder for Word functionality for researchers across the enterprise.
It enables searches of documents, files, and folders by text and by chemical structure.
Document Manager can run in an unattended mode, automatically indexing new documents in a central database as they are created.
Discovery Lims features an easy to use web interface to initiate laboratory requests, track progress and report results.
It maintains the full history of a request, including its status and audit trail, and allows requests to be sub-assigned within a lab.
Discovery Lims records results in Oracle or Microsoft Access databases and links to Microsoft Word reports in the Document Manager.
21CFR11 Compliance combines E-Notebook and Document Manager applications with business rules and consulting services to implement an organization's regulatory compliance processes.
The Knowledge Management applications work with three other major research information systems from CambridgeSoft.
Research and Discovery applications include a registration system, with an optional formulations and mixtures capability; inventory manager, for life-cycle tracking of chemicals; and CombiChem Enterprise, for the generation and management of combinatorial chemical libraries.
Applied Bioinformatics aapplications BioAssay HTS and BioSAR Browser allow scientists to set up models, visualize results, create structure-activity relationships, and search by structure.
Chemical Databases provide reference information about chemical availability, properties, and reactions.
They include CambridgeSoft's licensed electronic implementations of the Merck Index and Organic Syntheses.
The ChemACX database lists commercially available chemicals from 300 suppliers, while ChemIndex provides property information for thousands of common chemicals.