The 7 Best Electronic Lab Notebooks

Post on 16-Apr-2017

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The 7 Best Electronic Lab Notebooks

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90% of scientists still use paper notebooks

Even Leonardo da Vinci had one ...

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... but in modern research labs, where researchers handle more and more data, paper notebooks are becoming the bottlenecks in data management.

17% of all research data is lost every year

Because of poor traceability - data is scattered everywhere

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Because people switch jobs and leave laboratories - nobody understands their research notes

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Because something terrible happens to paper notebooks or computer files - data becomes unretrievable

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Problems that come along

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Spending too much time on data searching

Repeatability and reproducibility issues

Poor data sharing and poor data reusability

This means YOU lose A

LOT of research money!

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That is why more and more scientists are using

Electronic Lab Notebook (ELN)

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Why should you use ELN?

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Why should you use ELN?

Store the data in one

place Quickly and easily find your data

Record your data from anywhere

at anytime

Collaborate with your

colleagues

Reduce the experimental costs

Connect directly to the

lab instruments

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Of more than 60 ELNs available on the market, here are the 7 best ones according to Splice,

blog for life scientists.

www.splice-bio.com

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USER EXPERIENCE

The criteria Splice has used for making a list of 7

best ELNs

BUSINESS MODEL AND PRICING

INTEROPERABILITY AND FLEXIBILITY

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1. sciNote

Very user friendly and quick to set up Unique experimental workflow Open source license (MPL) Free account with unlimited project

users

Lacks rich text editor when writing a report

PROS

CONS

www.scinote.net4.7 - Excellent

5/5 4/5 5/5

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2. Benchling

Very user friendly and quick to set up Useful DNA tools (CRISPR guide,

primer design) Templates for sequence mapping and

sharing Free account with 10 GB of storage

space Free account is tied to a single user

Report structure is not flexible

PROS

CONS

www.benchling.com

4.3 - Excellent

5/5 3/5 5/5

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3. labfolder

Sketching Free account for smaller teams Free mobile app Integration with Mendeley

Not very intuitive Unflattering structured design Free version is limited up to 3 team

members

PROS

CONS

www.labfolder.com

3/5 3/5 4/5

3.3 – Very good

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4. docollab

Easy to use with useful tips Free account

Not possible to write comments Not compatible with mobile devices Local installation is not possible

PROS

CONS

www.docollab.com

4/5 2/5 4/5

3.3 – Very good

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5. LabArchives

Pubmed references entry editor Interface with GraphPad Prism

Poor GUI Very complicated, extra training

necessary Attached PDF files lose their original

format Local installation not possible

PROS

CONS

www.labarchives.com

2/5 3/5 4/5

3.0 – Good

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6. Labguru

Advanced tagging system for easy search

Track recording from batch number to concentration

Not very intuitive Project view too complex No free license available Expensive monthly subscription

PROS

CONS

www.labguru.com

3/5 2/5 3/5

2.7 – Good

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7. Hivebench

Plate designer Free account with 10 GB of storage

space

Creating protocols is very rigid No possibility to create tables Free account is tied to ten users Works only on iOS

PROS

CONS

www.hivebench.com

2/5 2/5 4/5

2.7 – Good

Your ELN, your choiceEach ELN is providing its unique set of tools to make your research work easier and more effective.

We hope this review will help you to choose yours and make a step towards a digital tomorrow!

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