Owen Piette, electrical engineer at Integrated DNA Technologies, successfully cracked the code in the qPCR Cryptogram Challenge. Piette along with a colleague also won GEN's first contest, the MicroArray Challenge.
GEN, Scintellix, LLC, and Bio-Rad are proud to announce that the Cryptogram Challenge: Cell Counting has been solved. Donna Marie Noga, Sales Administrative Assistant at Amresco, cracked the code in spite of the inaccurate clue 12. The keen observer and puzzle-solver would discern this, however, just like Noga was able to.
Dr. Halupa, Project Manager/Research Associate at the Department of Chemistry, University of Toronto, and Stephen Ross, Senior Software Developer at Devlin, have solved GEN's Cryptogram Challenge: RNAi-2!
A researcher at a company that develops, manufactures, and distributes cell culture media and molecular biology reagents has solved the first version of "GEN's Cryptogram Challenge: RNAi." It took him only 10 hours to come up with the answer: Wily siRNA quenches gene.
An astronomer and a neuroscientist have solved GEN's Cryptogram Challenge: ELISA REDUX. The two grad students, Charles Steinhardt, from the department of astronomy at Harvard University, and Forrest Collman, from the Tank Lab in the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics at Princeton University, came up with the answer to the Challenge: "To Quiz May Vex."
Two scientists from Canada have figured out the answer to the Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News Cryptogram Challenge. Adrienne Halupa, Ph.D., serves as project manager/research associate in the department of chemistry at the University of Toronto. Stephen Ross works as senior software developer at Toronto-based Devlin eBusiness Architects.
Two scientists from Integrated DNA Technologies (IDT) successfully solved GEN's online MicroArray Challenge. Owen Piette, electrical engineer III, and Ryan Witt, system engineer I, shared the winner's prize of $1,500.