PD PORTS PLC MANAGE HARDWARE ASSETS WITH NETSUPPORT DNA & PROVIDE SECURE REMOTE SUPPORT WITH NETSUPPORT MANAGER
"We required a solution to not only manage our hardware assets and support function, but also one which allows us to produce detailed reports on software / web usage and the type of hardware available across sites" says Mike Westmoreland, IT ManagerTHE EVOLUTION OF DNA DATABASES–RECOMMENDATIONS FOR NEW EUROPEAN STR LOCI.
Forensic Sci Int, Vol. 156, No. 2-3. (27 January 2006), pp. 242-244.Following a recent meeting by the ENFSI and EDNAP groups on the 4-5 April, 2005, in Glasgow, UK, it was unanimously agreed that the process of standardization within Europe should take account of recent work that unequivocally demonstrated that chance of obtaining a result from a degraded sample was increased when small amplicons (mini-STRs) were analysed. Consequently, it was recommended that existing multiplexes are re-engineered to enable small amplicon detection, and that three new mini-STR loci with alleles <130 bp (D10S1248, D14S1434 and D22S1045) are adopted as universal. This will increase the number of European standard Interpol loci from 7 to 10.
DNA FINGERPRINTING ON TRIAL: THE DRAMATIC EARLY HISTORY OF A NEW FORENSIC TECHNIQUE.
Endeavour, Vol. 29, No. 3. (September 2005), pp. 126-131.The early history of "DNA fingerprinting" in the UK might have been different were it not for the accounts of two dramatic courtroom trials, made by the participants and the media, in the mid-1980s. But these reports, which misrepresented the importance DNA evidence had in the trials, left a strong impression on the British public and on judges on both sides of the Atlantic. These trials, widely considered to be the first "victories" for DNA fingerprinting, have been frequently cited as proof of the utility and reliability of the technique, in both the UK and beyond. But in reality, it was the threat of DNA evidence being used rather than the integrity or validity of it that resolved these cases. At that time, DNA fingerprinting was still in its infancy, an untried and untested technology.
ETHICAL-LEGAL PROBLEMS OF DNA DATABASES IN CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION.
J Med Ethics, Vol. 26, No. 4. (August 2000), pp. 266-271.Advances in DNA technology and the discovery of DNA polymorphisms have permitted the creation of DNA databases of individuals for the purpose of criminal investigation. Many ethical and legal problems arise in the preparation of a DNA database, and these problems are especially important when one analyses the legal regulations on the subject. In this paper three main groups of possibilities, three systems, are analysed in relation to databases. The first system is based on a general analysis of the population; the second one is based on the taking of samples for a particular list of crimes, and a third is based only on the specific analysis of each case. The advantages and disadvantages of each system are compared and controversial issues are then examined. We found the second system to be the best choice for Spain and other European countries with a similar tradition when we weighed the rights of an individual against the public's interest in the prosecution of a crime.
GENOMIC SPECIFICATION AND EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF EUKARYOTIC DNA REPLICATION ORIGINS.
EMBO J, Vol. twenty-three, No. twenty-two. ( 10 Nov 2004), pp. 4365-4370.
Identification of DNA riposte origins( ORIs) during a genome-wide turn in eukaryotes has valid to be formidable due to a tall grade of abasement of their sequences. New constructional as well as organic approaches, however, have circumvented this reduction as well as have supposing arguable predictions of their genomic placement in a yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae as well as Schizosaccharomyces pombe, as well as they have additionally significantly increasing a series of characterized ORIs in animals. This essay reviews new justification upon how ORIs have been specified as well as confirmed in these systems as well as upon their law as well as attraction to epigenetic signals. It additionally discusses a probable one more impasse of ORIs in processes alternative than DNA riposte.






