Please check your part number vs. Nvidia's compatible hardware list at the
link below. Looks like it's on the list to me:
http://www.nvidia.com/object/quadro_pro_graphics_boards_linux.html
Cheers, Jim
On Mon, Mar 23, 2015 at 4:06 PM, Oganesyan, Vaheh
wrote:
> Graphics gurus,
>
>
>
>
> http:/
Graphics gurus,
http://www.amazon.com/PNY-DisplayPort-Profesional-Graphics-VCQ6000-PB/dp/B0044XUD1U/ref=sr_1_8?ie=UTF8&qid=1427151570&sr=8-8&keywords=nvidia+quadro
Would this card work for quad buffered stereo on Linux workstation? It does
have 3-pin mini Din.
Regards,
Vaheh Oganesyan
MedImm
To be sure it is protein, it would be nice to see some spots at resolution less
than (spacing greater than) ~12 A. The pattern is somewhat consistent with a
unit cell with two very short axes and one long axis. If so, then when you
rotate so that the long axis is in the plane of the picture (pe
I disagree, due in part to my availability bias of a very similar phenomenon
with lyso-phosphatidylcholine (lpc) detergent. I concluded at the time that the
crystals were from divalents plus hydrolyzed headgroups, or perhaps even the
whole detergent molecule. I think this particular pattern is r
Harry beat me to it :)
Couple of crystals plus maybe a small ice or salt component. Decent
resolution and what appears to be a dairly small lattice too.
Good luck,
Artem
On Mar 23, 2015 4:25 AM, "李孝蓉" wrote:
> Dear All,
>
> I want to ask if the crystal diffraction point On the link below is a
Hi
Yes - but there are several crystals there (in the lower part of the image you
can see there are patterns from different single crystals, in the upper part of
the image it looks quite powdery).
It would probably be worth trying to process with a program that can process
multiple lattices (e
Dear All,
I want to ask if the crystal diffraction point On the link below is a protein
crystal?
Thanks!
http://a2.qpic.cn/psb?/62847887-0e06-48de-ac7f-29f4681e1543/QILrL2iwf..qhV1IGIeW5oXDKmGgIxw.1HcWlKlIfGA!/b/dDKinnaQPwAA&bo=SAJXAgABBz8!&rf=viewer_4