![]() Just know that there are other options for remote, user-friendly bioinformatics like Galaxy (and probably others). However, if you want to conduct very basic whole-genome/transcriptome analyses with somewhat user-friendly software (and your computer), I would go with Geneious or UGENE (free). focus on a plan to overhaul the software, build it on a Mac code base. If you want a free alternative, Benchling is OK but a bit clunky and not as good. 1 Website 2 Updating your enzyme list 3 VectorNTI and MacOSX 10.4 (Tiger). ![]() Bottom line, if you just want software to help in cloning, restriction enzymes, DNA and protein sequence maps, primer annealing and primer generation, PCR and agarose gel simulation, Sanger sequencing, and even DNA and protein sequence alignment., you know, molecular biology tools, then I'd much rather go with Snapgene. On the other hand and as far as I know, Snapgene is not built to manage NGS data but it's better at what it does than any of the others I mentioned. DNASTAR Lasergene, Geneious, and others (UGENE, which is free and open-based) offer some bioinformatic workflows that may be useful for basic genomic/transcriptomic analyses.
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