Patrick van der Wel
@pcavanderwel.bsky.social
Solid-state NMR, Zernike Institute, university of Groningen. Posts = personal. Spectroscopy, biochemistry, structural biology, amyloid &
condensates, Huntington disease, membrane biophysics, biomaterials etc
condensates, Huntington disease, membrane biophysics, biomaterials etc
Haha. No just the name, as far as I know @feringalab.bsky.social
November 6, 2025 at 4:15 PM
Haha. No just the name, as far as I know @feringalab.bsky.social
Reposted by Patrick van der Wel
Even more excitingly, with the new data added, I am still 'substantially' under the 12 page limit.
That's like almost a brief paragraph worth of space.
I did go to Jimmy John's and get a souped up sammie to reward myself for this morning.
That's like almost a brief paragraph worth of space.
I did go to Jimmy John's and get a souped up sammie to reward myself for this morning.
November 1, 2025 at 8:42 PM
Even more excitingly, with the new data added, I am still 'substantially' under the 12 page limit.
That's like almost a brief paragraph worth of space.
I did go to Jimmy John's and get a souped up sammie to reward myself for this morning.
That's like almost a brief paragraph worth of space.
I did go to Jimmy John's and get a souped up sammie to reward myself for this morning.
… being created on a special dedicated computer system - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SGI_Oct... … seeing the Wikipedia image brings back memories!)
SGI Octane - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
October 31, 2025 at 7:58 AM
… being created on a special dedicated computer system - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SGI_Oct... … seeing the Wikipedia image brings back memories!)
Indeed! (Although I never had to, my PhD advisor explained how he used to print figures expanded to letter-size, when submitting a manuscript by postal mail. Such that they optimally reproduce when scanned for printing! Protein models would be printed on glossy paper …
October 31, 2025 at 7:58 AM
Indeed! (Although I never had to, my PhD advisor explained how he used to print figures expanded to letter-size, when submitting a manuscript by postal mail. Such that they optimally reproduce when scanned for printing! Protein models would be printed on glossy paper …