Hi Raji,
For case #2, an example is calmodulin, which displays remarkable
acrobatics across crystal forms, and +/- ligand.
I look forward to reading about the extreme cases that satisfy
case #1 on the list!
Ho
Ho Leung Ng
University of Hawaii at Manoa
Assistant Professor, Department
Viswan
Try cleaning the supply carboy and lines with bleach. Flush thoroughly with DD
water afterwards.
Mark
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 8, 2013, at 5:33 PM, "Viswanathan Chandrasekaran"
mailto:v...@biochem.utah.edu>> wrote:
Dear All:
I would like some advice on getting rid of persistent fung
Dear All:
I would like some advice on getting rid of persistent fungal growth in 96-well
sitting drop crystal plates that were set up using a Phoenix robot.
24-well sitting drop trays prepared by hand don't have this problem. Washing
the robot with 0.5% bleach followed by plenty of water had no e
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 11:38 AM, Raji Edayathumangalam
wrote:
> I am looking for two specific test cases (below) and appreciate anyone
> pointing me to known structures/examples for the same.
>
> (1) For a successful case of molecular replacement in which the search model
> has an overall sequence
Hello Everyone,
I am looking for two specific test cases (below) and appreciate anyone
pointing me to known structures/examples for the same.
(1) For a successful case of molecular replacement in which the search
model has an overall sequence identity to the target in the twilight zone
or worse (
It's nothing to do with Scala! It's something to do with chaining successive
programs in a task I think. I have seen it happen but I can't remember what the
cause is
Phil
On 8 Mar 2013, at 11:49, Frank von Delft wrote:
> (Is it time to change the macabre title of this thread? If I were Phil
try cheating by something like:
ln -s /usr/lib64/libXaw.so.7 /usr/lib64/libXaw.so.8
?
[berry@sbserv ~]$ ldd `which xplot84driver`
linux-vdso.so.1 => (0x7fffb936)
libXaw.so.8 => /usr/lib64/libXaw.so.8 (0x003f8600)
libXmu.so.6 => /usr/lib64/libXmu.so.6 (0x000
Hello,
in the current CCP4 (latest patch level), xplot84driver does not work on
CentOS5. It requires libXaw.so.8, which is unavailable for that system.
This is most likely a bug.
Best regards,
Oliver
PD Dr. Oliver H. Weiergräber
Institute o
> Indeed there is a new viewer and it usually works.
it would be nice to have specific feedback where it does not, against previous,
browser-based, system
> But I also have pre 6.3.0 results that I need to view and somehow the ccp4i
> qtRviewer does not manage to load the results...
I would t
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
how about loggraph, or vi+gnuplot?
Tim
On 03/08/2013 02:12 PM, vellieux wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Indeed there is a new viewer and it usually works.
>
> But I also have pre 6.3.0 results that I need to view and somehow
> the ccp4i qtRviewer does not manag
Hello,
Indeed there is a new viewer and it usually works.
But I also have pre 6.3.0 results that I need to view and somehow the
ccp4i qtRviewer does not manage to load the results...
So I was wondering if there was a Java-free alternative, I do have the
log files.
Fred.
On 08/03/13 14:04,
Two months ago, CCP4 deployed a new viewer for annotated result reports (plots
etc), which does not depend on browsers and java, exactly for reasons that you
write about. Do you use 6.3.0 with updates, and if yes, does your question mean
that the new viewer does not work for you? The viewer (QtR
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hello Fred,
if you double-click on a job in ccp4i, the results should be shown by
qtRview, the new log-viewer of ccp4. It shows the graphs, and you do
not need java (not even a web-browser).
Regards,
Tim
On 03/08/2013 01:56 PM, vellieux wrote:
> Hel
Hello,
I think the Subject line tells it all.
Former Linux box, Java was installed within a couple of browsers and I
could view the (nice and useful) plots within ccp4i.
New Linux box, Java {plugin / extension / whatever} is deactivated to
start with (this Java plugin seems rather difficult
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Words derive their meaning from the context they are used in ([flame]
as in "freezing crystals"[/flame]), and within this context (btw. the
error message comes from the OS, not scala) "child" does not refer to
a human being, not even an organism.
Che
(Is it time to change the macabre title of this thread? If I were Phil
it'd give me a jolt every time time I read it... "what have I wrought!")
phx
On 08/03/2013 11:35, Tim Gruene wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Dear Roger,
apart from Francois' suggestion using strace
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Dear Roger,
apart from Francois' suggestion using strace you can also check the
space available in /tmp, the amount of memory available on these
machines (using the command 'free') and run memcheck to test the
memories health.
Regards,
Tim
On 03/07/
Dear All,
I would like to inform you that a postdoctoral position is available at
the EMBL Hamburg Unit in the research group of Dmitri Svergun.
I attach a brief description of the Vacancy Notice below. Deadline for
application is 14th April 2013.
Further Detailed Information can be found under
18 matches
Mail list logo