You would hope one learns something from failed experiments.
I feel prehistoric now after Liz comment.
Jürgen
......................
Jürgen Bosch
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute
615 North Wolfe Street, W8708
Baltimore, MD 21205
Phone: +1-410-614-4742
Lab: +1-410-614-4894
Fax: +1-410-955-3655
http://web.mac.com/bosch_lab/
On Feb 17, 2012, at 8:30, "jens Preben Morth" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> After putting up your quote in the lab, a student quickly replied "To do
> and fail is to remember and to understand" :-)
>
> On 2/17/12 1:43 PM, Harry Powell wrote:
>> Hi
>>
>> In addition to what Poul and Graeme have said, it may be worthwhile attending one of the fine protein crystallography schools that are run, where you will hear lectures on integration& scaling etc that attempt to explain the basics of what's being done, and probably have a couple of practical sessions where you get to use the programs under the watchful eye of an expert. Or you could ask someone who has taught on (or attended) one of these schools if you could see their lecture slides and notes...
>>
>> "to read is to forget, to write is to remember, to do is to understand" .
>>
>> On 17 Feb 2012, at 11:31, Theresa H. Hsu wrote:
>>
>>> Dear crystallographers
>>>
>>> I would like to get some opinion. For someone beginning to learn basic crystallography including indexing, scaling ..., should I start with automated tool like Xia2? Or is manual method for each step better for learning?
>>>
>>> Thank you.
>>>
>>> Theresa
>> Harry
>> --
>> Dr Harry Powell, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, MRC Centre, Hills Road, Cambridge, CB2 0QH
>
> --
> J. Preben Morth, Ph.D
> Group Leader
> Membrane Transport Group
> Nordic EMBL Partnership
> Centre for Molecular Medicine Norway (NCMM)
> University of Oslo
> P.O.Box 1137 Blindern
> 0318 Oslo, Norway
>
> Email: [log in to unmask]
> Tel: +47 2284 0794
>
> http://www.jpmorth.dk
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