Hello there (I couldn't find your email so I am writing this to you here)
I'd like to invite you to add your blog to the new: http://sas-x.com/ Website.
It's a news website, all dedicated to SAS, based on bloggers content.
I am it's founder, and I created it after creating a similar (and somewhat successful) such website around the topic of R programming. That website can be seen at: http://www.r-bloggers.com/
If you are interested in joining, you can simply add your site at: http://sas-x.com/add-your-blog/
Introduction The drug development process is a clinical process that has its own language. It is not required that SAS programmers function as a MD or a regulatory expert, but working knowledge of the terminology is important to be effective. This section will walk through the drug development process from discovery to Phase IV. It will explain a wide range of acronyms such as IND, NDA , GCP and MedDRA . It will also describe some of the terminologies used within the process of clinical trials as a drug is developed and submitted to the FDA . This will give SAS programmers a larger perspective and context to their work during the analysis and reporting of clinical trials data. This section will tell a fictitious story about a college graduate named James who is starting a new position at a pharmaceutical company. Each new term James encounters is presented in bold and italicized for emphasis. As he enters a new professional world, he meets many people and learns new processes that...
The delivery of SAS data and reports to an iPhone application is unique and requires a different architecture as compared to traditional client server systems. This is similar to web applications in how it is delivered to a browser but in this case, the application replaces the browser. The diagram below illustrates the components of the iPhone SAS application architecture including: the iPhone application , a web server and the BI Flash server. In this example, the iPhone application on the iPhone communicates through standard TCP / IP protocol to a web server. The web server then communicates to an application server which is actually a SAS session processing SAS programs and data. The output resulting from the SAS program is then delivered back to the iPhone in a similar way a web browser would access a web page the serer. The distinction however is that the iPhone application is not a web browser and the SAS session running on the server is more dynamic compare to ...
Hello there (I couldn't find your email so I am writing this to you here)
ReplyDeleteI'd like to invite you to add your blog to the new:
http://sas-x.com/
Website.
It's a news website, all dedicated to SAS, based on bloggers content.
I am it's founder, and I created it after creating a similar (and somewhat successful) such website around the topic of R programming. That website can be seen at:
http://www.r-bloggers.com/
If you are interested in joining, you can simply add your site at:
http://sas-x.com/add-your-blog/
Best wishes,
Tal