Recent Stories
- Engineering PhD Student Angling for Success!
- Unborn babies 'practise' facial expressions in the womb
- Lancaster leads the way in cyber security bursary scheme
- Physicists gain insight into the UK's biggest killer
- Engineering students make finals of national start-up business competition
- Social media plagued by privacy problems, say researchers
- Lancaster Environment Centre conducts roadside pollution research for BBC
- Lancaster set to receive funding boost to stimulate UK's economy
- Billion-year-old water could hold clues to life on Earth and Mars
- How do we find out about cyber criminals?
New InfoLab21 Website
The InfoLab21 website has been re-branded and updated to reflect the growing range of ways that organisations can interact with InfoLab21. The site now includes a news function and numerous case studies. Previous issues of InfoTextX will be archived on the site, as well as information and presentations from InfoLab21 events and a Job Shop.
Contact us and let us know what you think of the site and if there are any particular features you would like to see.
Tue 18 July 2006
Latest News
Engineering PhD Student Angling for Success!
Lancaster University Engineering student Shaun Benzon has turned his hobby into a business with the launch of the only fishing reel designed and made in Britain.
Wed 19 June 2013
Unborn babies 'practise' facial expressions in the womb
Researchers from Durham and Lancaster Universities suggest that a foetus's ability to show a "pain" facial expression is a developmental process which could potentially give doctors another index of the health of a foetus.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Mon 17 June 2013
Lancaster leads the way in cyber security bursary scheme
Lancaster is one of four UK universities selected to take part in an 'industry first' sponsorship initiative encouraging students to take up Masters-level cyber security degrees.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Mon 10 June 2013
Physicists gain insight into the UK's biggest killer
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the UK, accounting for a third of all fatalities through illnesses such as stroke and heart disease.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Wed 29 May 2013