Digital content products and technologies provider ebrary, US, has announced the availability of its new subscription database in medical technology. The database is targeted at technologists, engineers and other employees of healthcare companies that design and manufacture medical devices, equipment and instruments. It is projected to help users conduct research more efficiently and effectively, resulting in greater cost savings and faster development times for new products.
With titles from publishers including Elsevier’s Academic Press and Taylor & Francis’ CRC Press, the growing collection is seen to cover all aspects of medical technology. These include biomedical engineering and materials, imaging systems, medical instruments, nanotechnology and tissue engineering.
Corporations can supplement the subscription database by purchasing individual e-books from Springer, Wiley, William Andrew and other publishers in a wide range of medical technology topics including artificial joints & organs, biomechanics, biomedical materials, ceramics in medicine, imaging systems in medicine, implants, medical electronics, medical instruments and apparatus, and nanotechnology. ebrary also offers pre-selected bundles in electronics engineering, materials engineering, mechanical engineering and other related subject areas. The selection can be previewed at http://tinyurl.com/ebrarymedtech.
ebrary has also expanded its business and engineering offerings. Hundreds of new e-books worth over $14,000 were recently added to its subscription databases in finance, leadership, and sales & marketing. Additionally, the company has extended its engineering product line with databases in chemical, civil, electronic, environmental, materials, mechanical and power engineering.
All ebrary titles are claimed to be delivered via one easy-to-use interface and include sophisticated technology that makes it easy to pinpoint and manage relevant information from multiple sources within the organisation and on the web. With InfoTools, technologists and engineers can expect to select words of interest and automatically link to additional information within the collection and other online resources. Furthermore, personal bookshelves are projected to make storing, managing, and sharing highlights, notes, and hyperlinks quick and efficient.
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