Monthly Archives: September 2006

Blog; Alma; ACS

I am stiil working out how the blogging software works – I lost the last post… Also formatting code, XML, etc seems to be hairy. So forgive some of the early stuff. Also Jim showed me today I had to … Continue reading

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Tenderbutton – A chemist's blog

I was pointed today to a really impressive blog: http://blog.tenderbutton.com The author describes himself as: My name is Dylan Stiles and I work in the Trost lab at sunny Stanford University. I’m engaged in the total synthesis of two natural … Continue reading

Posted in chemistry, open issues | 1 Comment

Open Molecular Information

Last week we had a young doctor friend staying with us and because he was interested in infection the conversation turned to MRSA. If you don’t what this is, look it up in Wikipedia under MRSA (this hyperlink should work). … Continue reading

Posted in chemistry, open issues | 7 Comments

Is Openness "ethically flawed"?

This is the first substantive post in this blog. To help you navigate I have categorised them – this one is “Open Issues”. Other categories are “XML”, “programming for scientists” and “virtual communities. This may help you select just the … Continue reading

Posted in open issues | 8 Comments

Welcome!

Welcome to the petermr blog! This is one of a series of blogs from scientists in the Unilever Centre for Molecular Informatics at Cambridge. I’ll indicate some of the others on my blogroll. For now, just note that there is … Continue reading

Posted in general | 2 Comments