Wine barrels - Bika Open Source LIMS 1 was built with sponsorship from a wine laboratory in the Western Cape

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Bika LIMS really free?

There are no license fees, the code base is achieved through the foresight of clients who want to see their investment strengthened. Labs source services, e.g. configuration, training and support, from their preferred providers, in-house or contracted

Can we install Bika LIMS on our own servers?
Sure, on site or server farm of your choice
What do we get?

Full ownership. Bika LIMS is Free and Open Source, users have full ownership and access to their code, a free upgrade path, sans licence fees or vendor lock-in. Bika can be used by unlimited users

Where's the catch?

LIMS is complex and you’ll likely require assistance with configuration, startup assistance and interfacing Instruments. We recommend taking out professional support for prioritised issues

How do we get better SEO visibility using Open Source?

Through participation on public forums and user groups indexed by search engines, and hosting Bika on your own domain. Sponsors of new features get bigger exposure through news Items and press releases

So is it any good?

Professional Open Source, POS, software has become better than closed systems for all its inherent benefits, unmatched in proprietary environments, and built-in quality control of open code repositories through peer reviews

Only standardised code including unit tests and documentation is accepted and thoroughly tested by early adopter community users

Close-up of beer bubbles and water condensation on glass
Red wine samples ready to be tasted. Bika Open Source LIMS 1 was built with sponsorship from a wine laboratory in the Western Cape
How does Bika LIMS relate to Senaite?

Bika LIMS is built on the latest Senaite core, backed by deep-going Bika Lab Systems expertise and packed with extensions

In 2017, after 15 years in development, the Bika LIMS project transitioned to Senaite. Bika Lab Systems codes Senaite improvements, and add-ons. Over time, these contributions have grown into a substantial set of enhancements that are included, with Senaite, in Bika LIMS releases

The Bika LIMS suite easily installs, on any platform, using a Docker image

Where can we save?

Most Bika and Senaite professionals will do server installations at discounted prices in order to grow the project. Big configurations can be imported from spreadsheets. Instrument results files can be converted to a generic format for import. Use public resources and professional support only for prioritised cases. If so inclined, code your own COAs and smaller customisations

About the expensive Support

Using non disruptive shared tools and online tracker to optimise capacity and budgets, a lot gets done per well managed support hour and tasks are resolved very efficiently. Rates are similar to proprietary LIMS’ – save by using public resources

Which Hardware

Best practice is a dedicated LIMS server running Debian or Ubuntu. On expandable VM hardware a light specification can be used to start on, 2 processor cores, 16 GB RAM, 2 * 256GB SSD in RAID.

Thin browser-only workbench PCs. Zebra desktop label printers and barcode scanners are robust and good value

The Bika UIX sucks

LIMS remains complex but Bika’s configurability, simplified logic and modern browser based front designed by usability experts, raise the bar and cannot be compared to proprietary legacy systems

Why are more labs not using Open Source LIMS?

Unfamiliarity – labs do not realise they can have tailor made industrial strength LIMS this affordably.

FUD – Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt, disinformation strategy by proprietary closed source LIMS

What does ‘Bika’ mean?

Bika is an isiZulu word, pronounced ‘beekah’ and means ‘to report’, or more colloquially, ‘Tell it as it is’. The name was chosen in the ethnic heyday of Ubuntu Linux, replacing the eurocentric Bach, Bika’s foregoing prototype for wine laboratories

Ingosi ‘chief’ Bika 2 followed, and Gaob ‘king’ Bika 3. Gaob is taken from Khoi San Nama, language of the world’s first people

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