Posted semi-seriously (they look like they’d be awful to use, but maybe I’m
being pessimistic): https://wiki.ezvid.com/best-virtual-keyboards. With a
projection keyboard, all you have to worry about cleaning is the benchtop.
> On 29 Apr 2020, at 21:38, Crissy Lynette Tarver wrote:
>
>
I am not quite sure how it is done in Refmac, but in phenix it works as
follows
- difference maps are gradient maps for a least squares target and they do
not contain any amplitude contamination from twinning.
- Fo type maps are computed either via classic detwinning (solving the
linear
https://pdb101.rcsb.org/learn/videos/fighting-coronavirus-with-soap
Crissy L Tarver
Postdoctoral Researcher
Department of Structural Biology
Stanford University School of Medicine
From: CCP4 bulletin board on behalf of Tim Gruene
Sent: Wednesday, April 29,
You can find tutorials for everything on YouTube, and one prominently
featured >>tech tip<< uses a dishwasher on a selection of cheap to
expensive keyboards. Interestingly, all keyboards worked after drying.
Good luck,
Lukasz
On Wed, 29 Apr 2020, 22:12 DUMAS Philippe (IGBMC), <
>This email was not typed but spoken by Siri on my laptop.
Outing yourself?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-SVvtxHJGU
HTH BR
> On Apr 29, 2020, at 2:59 PM, Sravya Mounika Kantamneni
> wrote:
>
> How about using keyboard guards and dissecting them as usual?
>
> Regards,
> Sravya
>
>> On
Even better - UV "inside the computer". Hasn't been done, but we're
testing it and it looks promising.
Matthew Bick
On Wed, Apr 29, 2020 at 1:12 PM DUMAS Philippe (IGBMC) <
p.du...@ibmc-cnrs.unistra.fr> wrote:
> I got a good advice about it: inject WhiteHouse disinfectant right into
> the cpu.
Have you considered autoclaving the keyboards in between users?
Or maybe autoclave the users?
That'll work, right?
--
Dr David C. Briggs
Senior Laboratory Research Scientist
Signalling and Structural Biology Lab
The Francis Crick Institute
London, UK
==
about.me/david_briggs
>I do not know if any of the equipment may suffer damage in the medium or long
>term due to the incidence of UV light.
Hmm….everything made of cheap plastic….i.e. almost everything made in
China…that must be the true conspiracy behind the virus!
Cheers, BR
On Wed, Apr 29, 2020 at
Make your users wear masks.
Sent from tiny silly touch screen
From: David Schuller
Sent: Wednesday, 29 April 2020 21:03
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] disinfecting keyboards
If you are going that route, it would make sense to locate the UV lamps
I got a good advice about it: inject WhiteHouse disinfectant right into the cpu.
Good to repeat it a couple of times, but wear mask and gloves against possible
Cotrump-16-20 last attacks !
Hope it will be helpful.
Philippe Dumas
(#SupportFauci)
- Mail original -
De: "Jurgen Bosch"
À:
If you are going that route, it would make sense to locate the UV lamps
in the X-ray hutch, since those already have safety interlocks, etc. The
X-ray beam itself is too directional to uniformly cover much.
On 2020-04-29 15:48, Eduardo Rodríguez-Román wrote:
Hi Tim,
It may be convenient to
Hello,
I agree with wiping instruments down with 75-80% ethanol (as used to clean
during cell culture). However, the BEST precaution is simply not touching your
face and washing your hands for 20-30 seconds after touching anything. I made
it a habit of scrubbing my hands with Hibiclens after
Hi Tim,
It may be convenient to install a UV light lamp in the room. Have you
thought about that?
I do not know if any of the equipment may suffer damage in the medium or
long term due to the incidence of UV light. You must evaluate this.
UV light is used in different microbiology laboratories
Hi Tim!
100% alcohol is less effective than 80%, and in order to completely be
sure, the keyboard needs not only to be wiped. One can buy keyboards
that can be disinfected because they are waterproof, such as the Cherry
JK-1068DE-2 for about 50 €.
We clean the keyboards in our lab
Because as soon as I put on gloves my nose starts to itch.
On 4/29/2020 12:37 PM, gianluca.sant...@esrf.fr wrote:
ISO keyboards are bad.
But why not just using disposable gloves to operate the instruments?
On April 29, 2020 9:30:19 PM GMT+02:00, James Holton
wrote:
Keyboards are cheap.
Yes, they are "de-twinned". There is really no other way to do it.
Without de-twinning you'd be looking at a map of two overlapping
structures. How do you turn a single observation of the sum of
intensities from two different hkls into two different Iobs values? You
need to know the ratio.
Injecting the disinfectant might not be much functional. Maybe the Royal
Society of London have thoughts to add to this. Can we publish it and call
it a computer hazard! *laughs*
Ankita Singla
Masters student
All India Institute of medical sciences
New Delhi
On Thu 30 Apr, 2020, 12:54 AM , <
ISO keyboards are bad.
But why not just using disposable gloves to operate the instruments?
On April 29, 2020 9:30:19 PM GMT+02:00, James Holton wrote:
>Keyboards are cheap. Why not everyone get their own?
>
>Then we can all stop fighting about whether the key should be
>shaped like an "L" or
You really just need two keyboards per computer, every user change, just add
the used keyboards into the hutch, the rest should take care of itself then.
You are at the source to successfully blast these little viruses
Jürgen
> On Apr 29, 2020, at 3:30 PM, James Holton wrote:
>
> Keyboards
Keyboards are cheap. Why not everyone get their own?
Then we can all stop fighting about whether the key should be
shaped like an "L" or not.
-James Holton
MAD Scientist
On 4/29/2020 11:53 AM, Tim Gruene wrote:
Dear all,
can you make suggestions for how to disinfect computer keyboards,
Re: injecting disinfect[ing]ant[?] through the USB cable [port?].Dear TimI am intrigued, seriously.Best wishes.Jon CooperOn 29 Apr 2020 19:53, Tim Gruene wrote:Dear all,
can you make suggestions for how to disinfect computer keyboards, and
instrument panels?
Our facility is going to reboot
Somehow this reminds me of the scene of Scotty talking into the mouse when he
is instructed to use the keyboard to interact with the computer.
How is voice recognition these days on Linux?
This email was not typed but spoken by Siri on my laptop.
Jürgen
> On Apr 29, 2020, at 2:59 PM, Sravya
How about using keyboard guards and dissecting them as usual?
Regards,
Sravya
> On Apr 29, 2020, at 8:53 PM, Tim Gruene wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> can you make suggestions for how to disinfect computer keyboards, and
> instrument panels?
>
> Our facility is going to reboot next week, with
On Wednesday, 29 April 2020 11:53:32 PDT Tim Gruene wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> can you make suggestions for how to disinfect computer keyboards, and
> instrument panels?
The consensus here is that the keyboards must have a cover that can be
washed/disinfected. They are not [usually] that hard to
?100% ethanol or isopropanol work really well on the microscopes, I soak a
Kimwipe and then clean the eyepieces and the knobs for changing magnification
and focus, as well as the door handles, bench tops, etc.
Diana
**
Diana R. Tomchick
?You could try doing what my technician does with her keyboard; she wraps it in
a clear, thin food wrap that can be taped to the back of the keyboard. This is
usually done to keep food and other things (liquids) from damaging the
keyboard, but you could simply replace the wrap every time
http://www.viziflex.com/disposables/universal-disposable-50-pack/
D.
On 2020-04-29 01:53 PM, Tim Gruene wrote:
Dear all,
can you make suggestions for how to disinfect computer keyboards, and
instrument panels?
Our facility is going to reboot next week, with shifts so that people
don't meet.
I once knew a particularly germaphobic IT manager who used to absolutely
*everything* via ssh or remote desktop from his own laptop, even when he
was physically in front of the user's computer. If feasible, that
approach would actually seem quite smart in the current environment.
On
Dear all,
can you make suggestions for how to disinfect computer keyboards, and
instrument panels?
Our facility is going to reboot next week, with shifts so that people
don't meet. The main interface will be the computer keyboards, as well
as the door of our X-ray diffractometer and the mounting
To the ccp4bb community,
If you have Ph. D. in data science, artificial intelligence, machine learning,
deep learning, computer sciences, bioinformatics, mathematics, computational
biology, or related field, and interested in applying cutting-edge technology
to antibody/protein engineering,
Dear all,
There have been warnings circulating for quite some time now about the
possible impact of SARS-CoV-2 on the cognitive abilities of patients who
have recovered from Covid-19, and I fear that I have reasons to worry about
possibly having fallen victim to these ... .
I came
Dear Len,
maybe a slight side-track, but you could consider taking one step back
and applying a slightly different approach to data-processing -
something we call "F(early)-F(late)" maps in autoPROC [1].
Why could that be useful here? Because it might allow you to
(1) differentiate between
Dear Colleagues,
the EMBL SAXS group is offering a free online lecture course on Solution
Scattering from Biological Macromolecules.
Starting from Tuesday, May 5th, members of our group will give a total
of 8 live webinars at *9:20 AM (CEST) on Tuesdays and Thursdays*
(excluding public
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