Starlims
This article contains promotional content. (February 2016) |
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Software, IT |
Founded | 1987 |
Headquarters | |
Key people | Divisional Manager: Mark Spencer |
$ 2.88 million (2008) | |
Number of employees | 162 (2008) |
Parent | Abbott Laboratories |
Subsidiaries | Starlims Technologies Ltd., STARLIMS Europe, STARLIMS Canada |
Website | www.abbottinformatics.com |
STARLIMS, an Abbott Company, develops and sells web-based commercial off-the-shelf Laboratory Information Management Systems (LIMS); Software solutions which manage the collection, processing, storage, retrieval and analysis of information generated in laboratories.
Corporate history
STARLIMS was founded in 1989 by Dinu Toiba and Itschak Friedman. STARLIMS's initial technological goal was to introduce the industry’s first PC-based LIMS at a time when laboratory data was managed through “legacy systems” running on mainframes and mini-computers. In 2005, STARLIMS's entirely web-based LIMS were launched, and in 2007 the company was introduced to the NASDAQ Stock Market under the symbol LIMS.[1]
In August 2008, the Company announced the establishment of STARLIMS Europe as a result of the May 2008 acquisition of its United Kingdom partner, Lab Data Management Ltd., which is based in Bolton, Greater Manchester.[2]
On 22 March 2010 STARLIMS Technologies Ltd. was acquired by Abbott, based in Abbott Park, Illinois, for a published cost of $123 million.
Awards
STARLIMS V10 received Honorary Mention in the Pittcon 2006 Editors’ Award, and as a “Pick of Pittcon” by Scientific Computing World magazine. STARLIMS has consistently featured in the Scientific Computing Magazine Readers’ Choice Awards.[3]
Products
- STARLIMS Laboratory Information Management System (LIMS) – Web-based LIMS for laboratory and enterprise collaboration
- STARLIMS Scientific Document Management System (SDMS) – Scientific Data Management System for unified management of all scientific data documents
- STARLIMS Electronic Laboratory Notebook (ELN) - Method Execution for QC environments
Markets
The company's software is used by more than 500 laboratories in over 40 countries around the world.[4] including those of Amgen, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center[5] and several forensic laboratories.[6] Research and Development (R&D), Quality Assurance QA and Quality Control QC are all supported.
Technology
STARLIMS software is based on an extendable web browser client-side application and a database server “farm.” Communications between client and server rely on standard web service messaging over Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). A secure HTTP HTTPS can be used for a more secure environment.
STARLIMS's web-based LIMS splits code into business logic (which is executed on the server side), and presentation code (run by a .net control on the web client). The STARLIMS web-based LIMS application servers utilize hardware resources by dynamically creating execution threads that concurrently handle business logic requests. The scalable distributed server farm is continuously monitored by a balancing server, which analyzes the workload and routes to the optimal server.
The STARLIMS client is a standard web browser that hosts a .NET control that dynamically presents the user interface. The STARLIMS XFD Renderer Controls are automatically deployed on the client when a new version is released. In addition to the classic GUI controls (labels, buttons, textboxes), this technology supports more complex controls, such as hierarchical data grids, tab controls, and selection boxes. For data-aware components, special business actions, termed data providers, are used to interface between the GUI and the data model residing on the server. For increased security, client-side scripting code is run in an isolated (“sand-boxed”) environment, and the server-side business logic code is separated from the client-side. The STARLIMS XFD Renderer uses the local machine’s computational capabilities, resulting in reduced server and network load.
In April 2013, STARLIMS released its version 11, which included new capabilities for mobile devices, HTML5 and advanced analytics[7]
References
- ^ Gelsi, Steve (May 4, 2007). "Starlims Tech files $37 mln IPO". MarketWatch.com. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
- ^ "STARLIMS Consolidates Direct Presence in Europe; Hires LIMS Veteran Joe Peden to Head STARLIMS Europe", PRIME NEWSWIRE -- Aug. 14, 2008 --
- ^ "Industry Accolades for STARLIMS V10". limsnews.net. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
- ^ "STARLIMS Technologies Ltd". New York Times. November 20, 2008. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
- ^ Taulli, Tom (May 25, 2007). "STARLIMS' Dim Reception". The Motley Fool. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
- ^ "http://www.ascld.org/vendor/starlims". American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
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: External link in
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- ^ Scientific Computing - STARLIMS 11 | Product Releases, March 29, 2013
http://www.starlims.com/Abbott_Acquisition_of_STARLIMS_-_PR.pdf