User:William Weaver: Difference between revisions
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''Assistant Professor'' <BR> | ''Assistant Professor'' <BR> | ||
Integrated Science, Business and Technology Program<BR> | Integrated Science, Business and Technology Program<BR> | ||
La Salle University <BR> | |||
<P> | <P> | ||
ISBT Box 282 <BR> | ISBT Box 282 <BR> | ||
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''Contributing Editor'' and ''Member of the Editorial Board''<BR> | ''Contributing Editor'' and ''Member of the Editorial Board''<BR> | ||
Scientific Computing Magazine | |||
<BR> | <BR> | ||
<BR> | <BR> | ||
== Education == | == Education == | ||
'''1988''' | '''1988''' Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania | ||
:: | :: B.S. with double major in Chemistry and Physics | ||
'''1992''' | '''1992''' The Ohio State University | ||
:: | :: Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry with concentration in Ultrafast Laser Spectroscopy, Instrumentation, Data acquisition, and Data analysis | ||
<BR> | <BR> | ||
Revision as of 18:51, 18 February 2007
William L. Weaver, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Integrated Science, Business and Technology Program
La Salle University
ISBT Box 282
1900 West Olney Avenue
Philadelphia, PA 19141-1199
(215) 951-1628 (215) 951-1772 FAX
mailto:weaver@lasalle.edu
AIM/MSN/GTk: qswitch426
http://www.lasalle.edu/~weaver/
Contributing Editor and Member of the Editorial Board
Scientific Computing Magazine
Education
1988 Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania
- B.S. with double major in Chemistry and Physics
1992 The Ohio State University
- Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry with concentration in Ultrafast Laser Spectroscopy, Instrumentation, Data acquisition, and Data analysis
Current Interests
I am currently interested in all aspects of Information Technology. Not so much from the techie-hardware view (although that is cool), but more so from the ideal that ALL Information should be available at ALL Times from ALL Places.
As an Analytical Chemist, we are witnessing the process of Research & Development beginning to evolve along the same path as Business Management. In 2006, I have no problem finding sales figures from March 15, 1996, but have no way to find research results from an experiment performed on March 15, 2006...unless I head down to the archives room and start leafing though dusty laboratory notebooks. Accounting ledgers have been around for centuries, however structured electronic laboratory measurements are relatively new animals. We don't even know what the records should look like, let alone writing standards for efficient ways to store and recall them.
This idea is most often encapsulated in the idea of "Laboratory Informatics", a topic requiring a huge amount of interdisciplinary expertise and collaboration..... Hence my interest in wiki's.
Personal
Please call me "Bill" =]