completely agree! There are actually several potential CentOS replacements, if
needed.
Kay
On Fri, 19 Feb 2021 13:47:25 -0800, Dale Tronrud wrote:
>For what it's worth, CentOS 7 will continue to be supported to the
>middle of 2024. That will give you time to see how all this shakes out.
For what it's worth, CentOS 7 will continue to be supported to the
middle of 2024. That will give you time to see how all this shakes out.
https://wiki.centos.org/About/Product
Since Red Hat Linux is founded on open source software anyone can fork a
new Linux distribution based on it, just
Well, since you ask...
I prefer, and recommend, Mageia. Second choice SuSE.
I find that the default configuration and choice of packages on these
are a better fit to my use in development and computation both on my
lab machines/servers and on my desktop/laptop.
cheers,
Hi all,
I just came across the (already quite old) news that Red-Hat switches their
support-policy for CentOS to a rolling preview model (replacing CentOS Linux
by CentOS Stream):
https://www.zdnet.com/article/why-red-hat-dumped-centos-for-centos-stream/
https://www.enterpriseai.news/2021/01/2
Dear Jacob,
you cannot kill a virus. It is not alive, but a complex chemical
compound that interferes with the chemistry of the host. So why don't
you work on the part of your conept over the week-end and present the
concept?
Cheers,
Tim
On Fri, 19 Feb 2021 12:55:32 -0500 Jacob Keller
wrote:
I am advertising for two postdoctoral positions in my lab. Our overall goal
is to understand the structure and function of tubulin modification enzymes
and microtubule effectors using a combination of cryo-EM, in vitro
reconstitution and protein engineering.
One postdoc position will be ideal for
Dear colleagues,
the Institute for Protein Innovation (IPI) is developing human synthetic
IgG antibodies for the human cell surfaceome, with a special emphasis on
cell surface receptors involved in neuronal development, immunotherapy and
cancer. We are looking for a structural biologist with exper
I don't think seeing the big picture resolves, or even addresses, the
question of possibly using a live vaccine. Some big-picture considerations
favor each side.
The concern of mutation is a grave one, and an unknown. I would point out,
however, that the same considerations apply to the wild virus
I posted this offline to Pavel, but maybe there are more people out there who
might find it useful?
Hi Pavel,
We have built and use See3, which is a replacement for CTweb that doesn't use
flash. It still uses the CM (Crystal) database. If you are interested you can
check it out (it would be a
So I just checked ours and you should be able to access the interface unless
your institution is blocking it. You can not look at individual drops but if
you go to the XXL in the Thumb drop down then you can at least see if anything
maybe in the drops.
And as mentioned looking locally is proba
Thank you all for the nice suggestions.
Regards;
Bashir
On Tue, Feb 16, 2021 at 1:09 PM Randy John Read wrote:
> Yes, I agree with Eleanor. But if there’s translational NCS, either the
> off-origin Patterson peak is below 20% of the origin peak so that Phaser is
> missing it, or perhaps you’r
Hi Johannes,
just making sure that there is no misunderstanding. I am currently working
in Dr. Frank Sicheri lab at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, ON, Canada. Is
this the local installation you are talking about? I am just using my Czech
email account, since I have the CCP4BB already set up on
Jan Abendroth wrote:
does anyone have any hints on how to real space refine cyclic peptides
with unusual amino acids in Coot? A good example are DNA-sliding clamp
proteins in complex with the cyclic peptide Griselimycin, eg. PDB code
6PTV.
In Coot I load the ligand description cif files for
Since we've already gone down this rabbit hole (pun intended), there's been
quite a bit written in the last year about the 'value of a statistical
life' and pandemic insurance.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2020/03/27/how-economists-calculate-the-costs-and-benefits-of-covid-19-lockdow
Hi Pavel,
We have the same problem. We no longer use the web interface. We connect to the
server with remote desktop protocol and run crystaltrack software remotely.
While no ideal it works.
If you can run a Windows 7 machine on your network and connect to the server
you can install crystaltra
Hey Pavel,
afaik our local installation of the software still works. So if going there
physically is an option for you, you can try that.
Cheers,
Johannes
Am Do., 18. Feb. 2021 um 18:21 Uhr schrieb Pavel Mader <
mader.pa...@seznam.cz>:
> Hello everyone,
>
> is there anyone else, who is using
I have been following this discussion with interest, without having any
informed opinions to throw in..
(Except as the daughter of an Australian farmer I still see myxomatosis as
a blessing - my father said in his youth to make a living he spent 10months
of every year trying to control the rabbit p
Hi Tim,
Very good points. The big picture is hard to grasp and we end up taking
political choices rather than anything else. I'm very glad that we can
outsource these choices to others every four year here.
Lockdowns may save lives in the here and now, but the global economic damage
makes life
Hi Jessica,
one comment: death cannot be prevented. It is a certainty as soon as
you are born (well, 9 months before).
While this seems an obvious subtlety, many of the current measures
seems to be influenced by the (probably unconscious) belief one can
defeat death. We can only reduce the risk t
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