Saturday, October 01, 2005

More even-more photos from the conference

So, after lunch, we had dinner.
Oh yeah, between that two major events, we had some talks.
Check out this super good AFM of some purified protein. So clear!


Before dinner, the group gathers for a photo (some of the girls were at the ladies so are not in this pic):


Ok, highlight of the day, DINNER!!!
Ham, salmon, some weird but tasty soup, and some other meats. Got more dishes but forgot to take a pic of them. Oh well...



This one is good - soursop coctail, excellent stuff, but Dr. Li didn't like it.

Friday, September 30, 2005

Even more pictures from the conference

Day 2 pictures!
We started out at Biopolis Matrix hall for half a day with some pretty good talks and Prof got a surprise bouquet of flowers. Here's Mr. Gubler giving the flowers to her.




Eva Harris! Amazing talk, erm... but abit too fast. Kinda forgot what she said...


Nevermind, here's a slide to remind me what she was talking about.


So, after a few more talks yadda yadda yadda, we got on charted buses and headed to Orchard Hotel for the remainder of the day. Oh, we were at Biopolis because one of the main sponsors is located there. Yes, we all know which one. At the hotel, first thing to do was EAT!
Minestrone soup, fresh greens, smoked salmon, cod, salads. yum.


From this, you know who was hungry and who was not so hungry, hhahhahha:



More food; chicken, veges, some curry, pineapple and I think that's potato salad; sorry, was not thinking, just eating:



Justin the fantastic post doc:



to be continued...

Thursday, September 29, 2005

2nd PDVI conference

Orchard hotel from Tuesday to Friday. Photos from Tuesday opening night.

As usual, good (and pretty) food:



Have you tried my cheesecake before? I bake you one cake, you give me one virus strain, good deal, yes?


When grandfather talks, everyone listens.



Chicken out:


Oh yes, the glossy poster:



"...and I left it overnight and the next day, a giant mutant virus as yellow as my beer and this big was crawling around inside the incubator..."

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

blood

Cho Bo day. Got my finger pricked and stained the smear. View under microscope and find weird things.
Cell with two eyes:


Cell with rod shaped nucleus:



what the...



Lady with hat and sunglasses:

Monday, September 19, 2005

Malaysia can’t thrive while it excludes minority talent

SIR — As a Chinese Malaysian, I sympathize with the sentiments described in your News story “The Valley of Ghosts” (Nature 436, 620–621;2005) about the Malaysian government’s often-denied ‘Malays first’ policy. In particular, university admissions are suspicious. Malay admissions are based on results from exams called Matrikulasi, taken at Malay-only pre-university colleges, whereas other students have to take the national Malaysian Higher School Certificate (STPM) exam. Reports of ethnic-minority students with near-perfect STPM results not getting a place at the local university have become the norm, and yet objections are often ignored — the government claims that it’s a fair game for all. Personally, I had no choice but to go overseas to study, and my parents had to spend their entire pension savings on financing my undergraduate degree in Australia. After graduation, most of my Malaysian classmates chose to either stay in Australia or work in Singapore, where fair competition and equal opportunities give them better job prospects. Before coming to the Netherlands I did my master’s degree in Singapore, where I met many Chinese Malaysians in this situation. Most of us would like to return to Malaysia, but we know that research prospects for minorities are limited. No matter how talented we are, it seems we still have to travel outside our country to seek opportunities.
In Yee Phang

Nature letters Septmember 2005

Saturday, September 17, 2005

New

Hello virus lovers
My friend just took back his camera and so I have nothing to shoot with, and thus nothing to upload. Words are just boring eh?
Anyway, since I detest blogs that are un-updated, I shall tell you that all the labs at level one just got new eye washes. green in colour and detachable with hand holders, it comes with a handy lever that when pressed, gives a bubbly gush of pure tapwater. But come to think of it, its not tapwater unless it passed through the tap huh? Fine. Pipewater; with a tinge of NeWater, and very soon - some processed seawater!
The sink below the Barnstead ddH2O filter has also been changed to stainless steel ones (which looks to me more like cheap die-cast aluminium) and the ddH2O filter is spoilt. So we have to go to level 4 to get it.
Precioussssssss water.
Anyway, Josephine got the dept to get a new one and the new Barnstead ddH2O filter has already came but is sitting in a box on the floor. Can't use it yet because only 'authorized personnel' are alowed to install it.

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

No more virus

MOH sent a letter to inform the lab that it has decided to allow the lab to continue using WN in experiments at BSL2 for the next 6 months, after which the lab will stop all experiments dealing with WN at BSL2 and should it want to continue such research, source for a BSL3 lab to work in. As such, the lab will be doing a lot of WN work in the next 6 months to complete crucial studies linked to ongoing work. After March when all live WN stocks must be destroyed, the lab will switch its focus to dengue.

"It's not the end of the world, it's just going to be inconvenient for us"

Friday, September 09, 2005

tomography


Electron microscopy and 3D tomography. Take 121 pictures with the EM, stack it up, make sure they are aligned well and then reconstruct the 3D image by using the pen like thing on the keyboard to draw on the plate like thing on the top right hand side of the picture. Still at the alignment stage which uses gold beads on the specimen to track the stacks. You need to track at least 10 clearly visible gold beads on all 121 pictures to align the picture together to form a 3D stack.
Because it's so repetitive, I need the attendance of my trusty pair of headphones and a RM5 disc full of MP3s.

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Electroporator

Got a 2 week loan on this $32K machine that only does mammalian cells but supposedly can give yields up to 81%. Each cell line has customized solutions and chemicals and cost a bomb. Since it's on a free loan, might as well use it. Looks cool though...

Who wants?

Who wants to post stuff here? Send me an email at samchiang at gmail dot com and I will invite you in as a member. Don't shy shy.

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

New chairs



Everybody, look at our new chairs!
Rubbery rough surface prevents butt slips for those crucial times in the lab.
The old comfy cushiony ones are gone to DBS, biosafety for us people in BSL2 or so they say. Guess the people in DBS don’t need safety huh. Compared to Willie’s office, what’s this?
You know what, the surface of the chairs remind me of the flooring of the old SBS busses.
Pah.

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

Microbio welcome tea








This happened last month but it was intersting because we WON!!!! okok, calm down, breathe in and out. Here are some pics for you to drool over.

Monday, September 05, 2005



Went to a Congress just the past weekend. Call it a lab social outing if you want to. We came we ate and we took the photo. The first night was a 'stand-about' dinner where there were no seats (third pic) while the Sunday one was a buffet style but this time they had tables. Each table had a different colour spotlight on it, washing all your food in a particular hue.

Friday, September 02, 2005

Teacher's day


Got Prof a bunch of flowers. Roses in pink, light red, and dark red.

Happy Teacher's Day!

new blog

The Flavivirus Lab group happenings.