To clarify, it is whole exome sequencing. I was wondering since it said it was targeted at diseases (which could be interpreted to mean it just looked at parts of the exome documented as causing problems).
Coverage is 75x, which is quite good. It includes 50 million SNPs, which would cover all of the exons and a fair bit of other stuff as well ... presumably regulatory regions?
It doesn't look like the genetic counseling offers much of use, unless an actual diseases turns up and you need help on what to do next. More likely they'll spend most of their time reassuring people that minor increases in risk factors aren't anything to worry about
But $150 per hour is a pretty reasonable price, compared to other services.
It looks like it automatically includes research-related data pulled from a couple databases. The genome map software looks pretty good too. And they say the research used to generate the data gets updated regularly, so presumably there would be ongoing online access to it somehow?
It looks like the people creating Genos also founded Complete Genomics back in 2006. Complete Genomics was bought by a global genetics firm based in China, and laid off a lot of employees in 2015 when the parent company changed the direction of Complete Genomics. But the people involved with Genos do have an established track record in genomics services, which is reassuring.