| bio | website | connjur.uchc.edu |
|---|---|---|
| location | Connecticut, USA | |
| age | 26 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 5 months |
| seen | Mar 28 at 18:18 | |
| stats | profile views | 7 |
I work in a scientific computing group on the CONNJUR project -- 100% open-source software for NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy) software and data integration.
Sub-projects under the CONNJUR umbrella include:
- CONNJUR-ST: Spectrum Translator; for converting time-domain and frequency-domain data between the various formats
- CONNJUR-WB: Workflow Builder; for processing spectral data (time-domain to frequency domain)
- RudolF: a sandbox for applying functional programming languages to NMR, data analysis, and protein bioinformatics. Currently we have Haskell and Clojure code, but are looking to add more languages!
Typical CONNJUR technologies:
- Java
- MySQL
- github
- CVS
- Eclipse
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Mar 7 |
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When is “gehen” properly used? @Martin ... that's why I asked a question ... |
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Dec 4 |
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“Es hat”: synonym for “es gibt”? Will do, thanks for the suggestion! |
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Dec 4 |
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“Es hat”: synonym for “es gibt”? Interesting answer -- so is Yiddish similar to german? |
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Dec 2 |
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“Es hat”: synonym for “es gibt”? Cool, that's what I thought. Thanks for the clarification! |
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Dec 2 |
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“Es hat”: synonym for “es gibt”? Not quite sure what you mean by 'constructed' -- artificial or unnatural? |
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Dec 2 |
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“Es hat”: synonym for “es gibt”? Yes, these are real examples -- Es hat ein Auto auf der Strasse. |
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Nov 30 |
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When is jen- used? @fzwo -- I'd be excited if you could expand on that in an answer! |
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Nov 30 |
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When is jen- used? @Mac, @elena, whether jen- is no longer used in spoken German was actually one of the important points of my question (which I unfortunately failed to emphasize). Thanks for the clarifications! |