Anyways, going to the Predictive Toxicology workshop, thanx to the bursary award I received from echeminfo (see Oxford, August 2010: eCheminfo Predictive ADME & Toxicology 2010 Workshop).
This afternoon I walked around a bit, watching all the old buildings. But I guess being here without anyone to share it with, and that it just looks Cambridge, makes me not-so-much impressed. Moreover, it's too busy with tourists and people randomly wearing Oxford University sweatshirts. Small and nice was the Museum of the History of Science, with some nice chemical pieces, like this one:
Buildings like the Radcliffe Camera are nice on the outside, but closed. Seems I have to become a fellow first. This is what it looked like today:
But the question is, of course, how long will we keep reading books... they're the hamburgers of educational material... Kindle and alikes will soon drop in price, and cost some €30 euro. But e-book prices will have to drop too, and I still do not get why an e-book is more expensive than a paperback... (see Amazon, the Kindle edition is more expensive than the paperback??). But then again... they are rich, and I am not.
There was some recent talk about the fact that no one can be Open to the full. You either do Open Data or Open Source, and make a living from the rest. That's where I nicely show I know bullocks of economics. I do BODR, CDK, ... all Open, all for free.
OK. That's a plus for Oxford... it makes you think about things. Perhaps there is something to morphogenetic fields...
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