PostSecret, the place you can send your deepest secrets, written on a postcard, and get them published on the net.
Archive for February, 2005
The web has some really great tools out there for us chemists:
“Not Voodoo” is a site that has many articles trying to demystify (as well as mystify) common procedures in synthetic lab work. There are many lists of tips, tricks, book suggestions - and you can rate them, too! Then there is a list of commonly used reagents - with visitors voting for whether they buy them or make them
Another really useful site has a huge table of protective groups and their stabilities versus all kinds of reagents!
Tagging & Meta-Data
The current tagging hype seems to be everywhere. Mostly observed at flickr, technorati and del.icio.us, but basically it is all about meta-information, which will finally arrive in most day-to-day uses, be it through the beforementioned web-applications or apple’s cool new search feature for MacOSX Tiger (10.4). Not all meta-information is as valuable as it seems, but hey, we all need to start somewhere.
in DevonThink
I have been thinking how I might want to increase the value of my stack of literature I have here for my thesis and DevonThink was one of the first choices, as it “creates the interconnections” quite easily with its superb “see also” function. Its Auto-classification system does not work for me yet, but then I do not really have a good structure of the papers in my database yet and I was thinking along a tag based structure as well.
There is a discussion going on here about how to group single documents in multiple groups (as could be done with replicates). And I suppose there are two ways of doing such a thing:
- Add keywords to my files via the file’s comments.
- Create replicates in my “tag” groups.
Number 1 is too much work, i think, as I have no way of making this easy to do, Number 2 is just more intuitive and also might provide the classification features I am looking for. However: It would also be really cool if I could tell DevonThink a number of keywords that have aggravated meaning for DTs relationships. If I tell DT that Files A and B both are about “cooking lobsters” and there is not even a single mention of “lobster” in both files I still want DT to turn up both files when I search for it, as well as group other files togethere with them that do contain the term. Is this doable?
I realize there would be a possibility for tagging with keywords that worked through AppleScript - but I have not learned to think in AppleScript yet; I envision a simple interface for keyword usage as in iPhoto5. (in fact I would love to have this kind of feature in iTunes as well).
visualizing connections and relationships
What would also be cools is a feature hinted at by Christian Grunenberg here which would be really amazing:
If you’re using lots of replicants, then the structure of the database isn’t hierarchical anymore - you’re creating a net. Therefore the only issue might be that there are no other views (e.g. maps) available yet. But they’re in the pipeline
Which also makes me wonder: I have most of the literature I am working with in a bibtex file, associated with keywords. Is there any way of parsing that file and creating such a thing as a mindmap based on these keywords? Grouping similar papers (with like keywords) and possibly showing relationships between papers that I have not seen before (as there are too many papers to have them all in my head) and/or to just serve as a topic based list of articles in my database…? Somehow reminds me of what Lion is talking about in his book on “mapping his thoughts”.
Currently playing in iTunes: Staqueando by Band (O) Neon, Track 11 from the CD Tango Chill Sessions: An amazing set of tango-esque dance music. You still hear and feel the tangos, but there is always a driving beat that makes you move in completely different ways than a pure tango ever would. TangoFusionClub like. Funny, of the many electro-tango CDs out there in the last year or two this is probably one of the best. And not because it sounds so completely new because it isn’t. Of course you hear known tangos in those songs, but there is always more, more than just a remix of an old tango - and that makes it so great. You can feel at home inside the music, you feel like you always knew that a cross between Tango and Chill-Out would sound like this.
Genre
Electronic, Chill-Out, Breakbeat, Tango
Erm, I just realized I have 50 Gmail invitations left. Anyone?
[update 16:10] as mentioned by Dan:
To Be perfectly honest it doesn’t really look like anyone wants them anyways… It seems that people are either totally out the loop and thus don’t get invites, Think Hotmail is actually a usable option, already have one, or just don’t need one.
How about a better way to spend your time than sending gmail invitations into /dev/null?
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