In early March, as the coronavirus was spreading across the United States and testing capacity was already a problem, Bill Phillips had an idea. Phillips is the chief operating officer of a medical device company, Spectrum Solutions, that provides saliva test kits for companies like Ancestry.com. He wondered if Spectrum’s kits — which require customers to spit in a tube and ship their samples through the mail — could work with detecting this new virus. To read the full story.
Recent Posts
- Poll Finds Majority of New Jerseyans Give Negative Ratings to State and National Economy.
- New NJACTS Publication
- One Rule Change Would Help Tens of Thousands of New Jersey Families Pay for Childcare
- Advanced Models Offer Scientists a Promising Tool to Better Understand Brain Disorders
- NJIT Computing Professor Zhi Wei Named Fellow of AAAS, Follows IEEE Honor.
Categories
- Community (2,241)
- Covid (985)
- CTO Events (6)
- News (2,856)
- Pilots (21)