Stephen Turner from Pacific Biosciences gave a dramatic presentation this afternoon launching PacBio's new third-generation sequencing instrument. The room was packed for the seminar, with a palpable buzz, and Turner's presentation was preceded by a theatrical introduction from PacBio CEO Hugh Martin. Genetic Future
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Daniel MacArthur
I write about the genetic and evolutionary basis of human variation, and the companies trying to sell you information about your genome.
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« Belated news from AGBT | Main | New players in sequencing debut at AGBT »
Pacific Biosciences introduces new third-generation sequencing instrument at AGBT
Category: agbt • conference blogging • next-generation sequencing • pacbio • pacific biosciences • whole-genome sequencing
Posted on: February 26, 2010 5:15 PM, by Daniel MacArthur
Stephen Turner from Pacific Biosciences gave a dramatic presentation this afternoon launching PacBio's new third-generation sequencing instrument. The room was packed for the seminar, with a palpable buzz, and Turner's presentation was preceded by a theatrical introduction from PacBio CEO Hugh Martin. 

Comments
Sparklers only at next years beach party then ? is it just me or does it look a bit like Lenins Coffin ? Whats that next to it - beer fridge ?
Posted by: H.Hare | February 27, 2010 11:24 AM
Daniel, at the Cold Spring Harbor presentation (Sept, 2009) Steve Turner showed how the PacBio technology reveals not just the A,C,T,G sequence, but also their state of methylation (if any). The only other sequencing technology to do this was introduced by Oxford Nanopore in the same meeting - however they are some years behind. At Marco Island, did PacBio elaborate to any extent if their first model would show methylation? For HolGenTech, Inc. along with the extremely long reads (doing away with the problem of assembly of repeats) the methylation-detection is crucial; both from the viewpoint of The Principle of Recursive Genome Function as well as from the viewpoint of putting methylation-detection of sequences into use in a "consumer business model" (slowing of aging, cancerous patterns by Personalized Participatory Prevention Program in consumers' genome-based product recommendation).
Pellionisz_at_junkdna.com
Posted by: Andras Pellionisz | February 27, 2010 4:05 PM
Track Eric Schadt for a spectacular presentation from a researcher actually using this technology.
Posted by: Alexander Pico | February 28, 2010 10:42 AM
I second the nomination for Eric Schadt. I saw him at the CSUPERB Symposium in January and he was a great speaker with very shiny stuff to present.
Posted by: Kathryn | March 11, 2010 12:11 AM
I've seen 3 or 4 presentations by Eric Schadt, and have yet to hear him get beyond the "shiny stuff".
Posted by: TomAmes | March 17, 2010 12:04 PM