Actually we don't declare anything to TSA, Jahaun just carries them in his
carryon and it is fine. Easy peasy?
On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 3:48 PM <
0c2488af9525-dmarc-requ...@jiscmail.ac.uk> wrote:
>
> ... and don't say you're travelling with heavy water!
>
> Jon Cooper
>
> On 19 Feb 2020 17:1
Hi all
It’s been a while since I posted on this group so apologies for a slightly
tangential, non CCP4 question.
I wanted to get secondary structure predictions for designing a library of
50-100 amino acid peptides. The library could get very large ( 10^9) and I
was wondering if there is a way to
... and don't say you're travelling with heavy water!Jon CooperOn 19 Feb 2020 17:12, "Azadmanesh, Jahaun" wrote:
Hello,
I have traveled to a neutron beamline ~6 times over the past several years.
I have had awful luck shipping crystals, so I decided to hand-carry and I found this best.
The laboratory of Dr. Yogesh Gupta at University of Texas Health Science
Center in San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio™) is seeking a highly
motivated and enthusiastic Postdoctoral Fellow to study protein-nucleic
acid interactions in post-transcriptional gene regulation and chromatin
biology. We com
Hi David,
raising the 99*99 limit does not yet appear to be needed with a single such
machine - you'd have better performance by running XDS.INP with e.g.
MAXIMUM_NUMBER_OF_JOBS=4! number of processes spawned
MAXIMUM_NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS=32 ! number of threads
Other combin
Hello,
I have traveled to a neutron beamline ~6 times over the past several years.
I have had awful luck shipping crystals, so I decided to hand-carry and I found
this best.
I'm not sure what conditions you plan to shoot your crystals. I mount my
crystals in a sturdy quartz capillary (from vi
Discover your future at Berkeley Lab!
Berkeley Lab’s Molecular Biophysics & Integrated Bioimaging Division (
https://biosciences.lbl.gov/divisions/mbib/) has an opening for an
Exascale Computational
Crystallographer Project Scientist. The Project Scientist, with a strong
interest in high-performa
We are doing more and more large sets of fragment and other ligand screening by
x-ray these days, sometimes with the good folks at Diamond, sometimes
elsewhere. I only see this trend increasing (at least for us) in the future
as beamlines get even brighter and these types of screens can be don
Since Kay asks:
Do all of us really want and need to collect from thousands of crystals every
synchrotron day? Are all of us really producing that many crystals? Who is?
I can't help to respond: even if not "all of us", we certainly are!
https://www.diamond.ac.uk/Instruments/Mx/Fragment-Scr
Thank you for the info. Another of the Threadripper 3xxx series, the
3990X has 64 cores for 128 threads, so perhaps it is time to raise that
99*99 limit in XDS.
On 2020-02-19 07:21, Kay Diederichs wrote:
Dear Ana,
it is easy to ask the question (and I've been asked several times), but
some
Dear Ana,
it is easy to ask the question (and I've been asked several times), but
somewhat difficult to answer. To add to Graeme's excellent explanations:
- all developers of MX processing software have seriously considered to
implement their algorithms on GPUs, and have decided that the effort
Hi
Back in the days when I worked with extremely oxygen and moisture sensitive
organometallics (some were pyrophoric given a sniff of oxygen...) I sealed the
crystals in capillaries under an argon atmosphere. The huge advantage of this
over shipping cryocooled crystals is that they can be packa
Dear Stephen
I guess the first thing to understand is whether you have a RT or cryo NMX
planned. In my personal experience the transition from RT to cryo NMX is not
necessarily straightforward. If you (and the beam line scientist) are sure that
cryocooled xtals will give you an experiment then
Dear Stephen,
A particularly well informed advisor would be your likely collaborator, your
neutron facility scientist. Anyway please do read section 5 of
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/iucr/doi/10.1107/S0907444905001368
Best wishes,
John
Emeritus Professor John R Helliwell DSc
> On 19 Feb 2
Dear CCP4 community,
I have an impending trip to a neutron source and was wondering how people tend
to ship their samples prior to beam time? Is sending something frozen best or
is sealed in a capillary more sensible or is there another better way? One
caveat is that ideally my sample should
Folks,
To clarify following a couple of questions re: sizes of Eiger data sets
Sparsely measured Eiger data compress very well indeed - I have seen cases
where the compressed data are around 100 kB / frame for 18 megapixels
The issue I was addressing below is that the pixels stored in RAM are t
Dear all,
There is an opening for a post doc with experience in recombinant protein
production and purification, enzyme kinetic analyses and structural biology
(crystallization, cryoEM) in our group in University of Oulu, Finland. Our
research focuses on the enzyme family of 2-oxoglutarate-dep
Dear Ana,
To follow up on the contributions from others, there are some particular
annoyances with MX processing which differentiate it from other “big data” or
imaging problems.
In tomographic reconstruction you have a big block of data which needs to (as a
simplistic approximation) be transf
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