fightaidsathome.scripps.edu
FightAIDS@Home - Research Team
http://fightaidsathome.scripps.edu/team.html
Click here to join. Is a research project run by Prof. Arthur Olson's laboratory. In the Department of Integrated Structural and Computational Biology at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California. The FightAIDS@Home project also includes Prof. Rik Belew from the Department of Cognitive Science at the University of California, San Diego. The Scripps Research Institute. Prof Arthur J. Olson. Is the FightAIDS@Home project leader. Joined Prof. Olson's laboratory at TSRI on March 2008. He...Which...
mgl.scripps.edu
Dr Garrett M. Morris
http://mgl.scripps.edu/people/gmm/index.html
Naturalists with microscopes have told me that it teems with quiet fun. G K CHESTERTON, The Spice of Life. Is one of the foundations of structure-based drug design. Often, data are available for the shape of a protein. And a drug separately, but not for the two together. Docking. Is the process by which two molecules fit together in 3D space. Was originally written in FORTRAN-77. In 1990 by David S. Goodsell. Here in Arthur J. Olson's. Our lab runs FightAIDS@Home. 16 May, 2003). See how Ed Moret. Structu...
fightaidsathome.scripps.edu
FightAIDS@Home - FAQ
http://fightaidsathome.scripps.edu/faq.html
Click here to join. What is Fight AIDS @ Home? FightAIDS@Home is a project run by the Olson Laboratory. That uses distributed computing to contribute your computer's idle resources to accelerate research into new drug therapies for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. FightAIDS@Home made history in September 2000 when it became the first biomedical Internet-based grid computing project. FightAIDS@Home was started with Scott Kurowski. We joined World Community Grid. On 21 November, 2005. All you need to do.
logiqtower.com
Toy Inventor | Logiq Tower
http://logiqtower.com/toy-inventor
Raquo; Toy InventorLogiq Tower. News & Press. 8212;————————————————————————————————————————. Research Consultant to Inventor. Scott Kurowski, based in San Diego, California, uses science, software and mathematics to solve educational toys and puzzles. For this project, Scott built a custom software tool to help analyze the tens of thousands of solutions comprising Marko’s Logiq Tower puzzle.