Symbion LX can operate and integrate many spectrometers and other analytical instruments via a single, comprehensive and configurable user interface, and is available with 'deep' academic discounts
Symbion Systems says it will provide its products to the academic community at deeply discounted prices.
Academic licenses of Symbion LX are now priced at US$795 each.
Unlimited, institution-wide site licenses are now offered at $2995 per year.
Unlike earlier analytical instrumentation packages, Symbion LX integrates current generation services and features with a fully relational SQL-compliant database to provide a highly capable instrumentation development and delivery platform.
Symbion LX supports the full range of communication and interface standards and protocols.
Symbion's scripting facility allows the user to completely automate instrument control, data acquisition, calculation of results, and control of auxiliary devices and sensors.
It also allows the user to integrate the execution of Matlab M-file scripts directly within Symbion's scripts which gives students the ability to move seamlessly between Matlab and Symbion's spectroscopic and instrument control capabilities.
All operations are controlled from the Symbion data array workflow manager, which provides standardisation of instrument control, data storage, and interaction with disparate math engines, as well as with popular chemometrics routines such as PLS +IQ, Unscrambler, Pirouette, the PLS Toolbox, and the Chemometrics Toolbox.
Standard Symbion LX features include automated data base storage of all data, attributes, and configuration information; the ability to import spectroscopic and other multivariate data from external data bases and files; compatibility with common file formats; comprehensive spectroscopic data manipulation capability; unlimited methods development and execution using the Symbion Scribe scripting language and its visual scripting wizard; in-line execution of Matlab scripts; compatibility with PLS+IQ prediction engine: and support of National Instruments's Nidaq drivers.