Not to worry- close inspection of the legalese shows that it is the _USES_
of the system that may be intercepted, monitored etc; not the _USERS_.

Of course if by monitoring your _USE_ they discover a good reason
why you the _USER_ should be intercepted, apprehended, and prosecuted,
then all bets are off!

But don't let that inhibit you from attending this exciting workshop.
Ed


Jürgen Bosch wrote:
Do we really agree to be intercepted and monitored ?
Not sure I want that.
Jürgen


------------------------------------------------------------------------


On 19 Jun 2009, at 14:26, Allaire, Marc wrote:

Meeting Notice: Early registration deadline: June 30th

We invite you to participate in a workshop entitled 'MX Frontiers at the One Micron Scale' which we are organizing at Brookhaven National Laboratory for July 23 and 24, 2009. If you examine the workshop's agenda on its website at http://www.nsls.bnl.gov/newsroom/events/workshops/2009/mx/ <https://webmail.bnl.gov/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=https://webmail.bnl.gov/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.nsls.bnl.gov/newsroom/events/workshops/2009/mx/> , you will see that a panel of distinguished speakers has agreed to lecture and discuss frontiers and future directions in micro-macromolecular crystallography. These trends will influence the concepts for your new beamlines at NSLS-II, the ultra-bright new light source now under construction at BNL. This workshop will occur immediately preceding the ACA meeting (http://www.cins.ca/aca2009/).

We will learn about results obtained with true micro-crystals, get a sense of the power and challenges in membrane protein crystallography, and get a glimpse of the potentials in serial crystallography. The physics of radiation damage and its mitigation at the micron-scale will be discussed from first principles to experimental verification. The pioneering crystallographers that invented, use, or manage the currently operating micro-beam lines will tell us about results from their facilities and explain capabilities and limits of current x-ray focusing optics. Other speakers will identify engineering challenges in instrumentation, specimen handling and visualization.

Consider participating in this fast paced, modestly priced (late fee after June 30th), day-and-a-half workshop and register using http://www.nsls.bnl.gov/newsroom/events/workshops/2009/mx/registration/registration.asp <https://webmail.bnl.gov/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=https://webmail.bnl.gov/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.nsls.bnl.gov/newsroom/events/workshops/2009/mx/registration/registration.asp> .

Dieter Schneider (schnei...@bnl.gov <mailto:schnei...@bnl.gov> ), Lonny Berman (ber...@bnl.gov <mailto:ber...@bnl.gov> ), and Marc Allaire (alla...@bnl.gov <mailto:alla...@bnl.gov> ), workshop organizers.



-
Jürgen Bosch
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute
615 North Wolfe Street, W8708
Baltimore, MD 21205
Phone: +1-410-614-4742
Lab:      +1-410-614-4894
Fax:      +1-410-955-3655
http://web.me.com/bosch_lab/

Reply via email to