Hi,
I think the plates are Greiner bio-one plates. We use them on the
nanodrop crystallisation robot at PSB-EMBL (https://htxlab.embl.fr).
Will check with Jean-Luc Ferrer from IBS (if he has not gone home
already, it is late on a Friday...).
Fred.
Narayanan Ramasubbu wrote:
mb1pja wrote:
Dear Fred
A really nice video that would be great for giving
non-crystallographers (including colleagues and 1st year students,
and perhaps also friends and family) an overview of what we do. Thank
you for pointing it out - and of course very many thanks to Dominique
Sauter for making it. I am sure it will prove very popular.
bet wishes
Pete
(Pete Artymiuk)
On 11 Nov 2009, at 09:44, Vellieux Frederic wrote:
Dear all,
Thought I'd share this with you:
I located this through Ms Ines Kahlaoui, from the Beja Higher
Institute of Biotechnology in Tunisia (Ines has to teach and locates
videos on the internet, which she then downloads and uses for
teaching). Ines located this jewel:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7084929825683486794&ei=M3b5SvXqD6em2AK3jY33CQ&q=Plongee+coeur+vivant#
This is the French version (explains everything about Structural
Molecular Biology, but for the maths :-( , but also shows what we
crystallographers have known for a long time, since the first colour
E&S graphics workstations in fact, that the electron are blue :-) ).
Both French and English versions can be downloaded from
http://cj.sauter.free.fr/xtal/Film/
No rights associated with the movie, and the Strasbourg group
intends to release a higher quality version on DVD soon. Please
contact them about that... I am only sharing what I thought was good
for educational purposes. 18 minutes of your life, but worth it I
think. So feel free to share this.
Wish you all a nice day,
Fred.
Hi:
Could someone point out the name and where to get these
crystallization plates used in the video?
By the way, this is a wonderful video.
Subbu