In the past I've written that collecting instrument data is mostly a technical problem, compared to collecting metadata, which is a mix of technical and process/operational. But as I was trying to come up with an eye catching title for this post, I realized that there’s actually more to collecting instrument data. But it isn’t process/operational - it has to do with the economics of selling instruments. So that's what this post will be about. If you're following along, this is part of my ongoing series on the use cases that biotech software needs to support.
Accessing instrument data is an economics problem
Accessing instrument data is an economics…
Accessing instrument data is an economics problem
In the past I've written that collecting instrument data is mostly a technical problem, compared to collecting metadata, which is a mix of technical and process/operational. But as I was trying to come up with an eye catching title for this post, I realized that there’s actually more to collecting instrument data. But it isn’t process/operational - it has to do with the economics of selling instruments. So that's what this post will be about. If you're following along, this is part of my ongoing series on the use cases that biotech software needs to support.