Audience with 2001 Nobel Laureate
A week after being awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, K. Barry Sharpless made his way to Columbia University, and met (among others) the Danishefsky group members.
A week after being awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize for Chemistry, K. Barry Sharpless made his way to Columbia University, and met (among others) the Danishefsky group members.
We developed a straightforward deprotection of partially benzylated mono- and disaccharides with free anomeric hydroxyl-groups under dissolving metal conditions. More…
Over the last years, structure-based chemical databases such as Beilstein, REACCS and SciFinder have gained tremendous importance for the synthetic organic chemist. Read more about a free tool, available on the net.
Design, content and technology are coming of age on the web and this maturation continues at a pace. At Linkdup, folks are constantly keeping an eye on the web world, scanning their sources for the latest news and links. More…
The Librarians’ Index to the Internet is a searchable, annotated subject directory of more than 7,300 Internet resources selected and evaluated by librarians for their usefulness to users of public libraries. It’s meant to be used by both librarians and non-librarians as a reliable and efficient guide to described and evaluated Internet resources. Visit the Library…
Refdesk, which has more than 20000 links to dictionaries, newspapers, government sites and many other sources arranged on about 500 web pages, was created in 1995 by Bob Drudge. If you don’t find here, it doesn’t exist.
SYW buy a cell phone? SYW mix a few classic drinks? SYW be a model? SYW write a business plan? These and many more topics are featured on this handy site.
Parodies, drama and the absurd. Twisted. Cryptic. Dreamy. An unspeakably vast site with gazillions of movies. Visit Atomfilms.com.