Monday, January 07, 2013
Anti-GMO activist sees the light!
Monday, August 18, 2008
Guidelines for giving a truly terrible talk
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(1) Use lots of slides. A rule of thumb is one slide for each 10 seconds of time allotted for your talk. If you don’t have enough, borrow the rest from the previous speaker, or cycle back and forth between slides.
(2) Put as much information on each slide as possible. Graphs with a dozen or so crossing lines, tables with at least 100 entries, and maps with 20 or 30 units are especially effective; but equations, particularly if they contain at least 15 terms and 20 variables, are almost as good. A high density of detailed and marginally relevant data usually prevents penetrating questions from the audience.
(3) Use small print. Anyone who has not had the foresight to either sit in the front row or bring a set of binoculars is probably not smart enough to understand your talk anyway.
(4) Use figures and tables directly from publications. They will help you accomplish goals 2 and 3 above and minimize the amount of preparation for the talk. If you haven’t published the work, use illustrations from an old publication. Only a few people in the audience will notice anyway.
Presentation:
(1) Don’t organize your talk in advance. It is usually best not to even think about it until your name has been announced by the session chair. Above all, don’t write the talk out, it may fall into enemy hands.
(2) Never, ever, rehearse, even briefly. Talks are best when they arise spontaneously and in random order. Leave it as an exercise for the listener to assemble your thoughts properly and make some sense out of what you say.
(3) Discuss each slide in complete detail, especially those parts irrelevant to the main points of our talk. If you suspect that there is anyone in the audience who is not asleep, return to a previous slide and discuss it again.
(4) Face the projection screen, mumble, and talk as fast as possible, especially while making important points. An alternative strategy is to speak very slowly, leave every other sentence uncompleted, and punctuate each thought with "ahhh", "unhh", or something equally informative.
(5) Wave the lights pointer around the room, or at least move the beam rapidly about the slide image in small circles. If this is done properly, it will make 50 % of the people in the front three rows (and those with binoculars) sick.
(6) Use up all of your allotted time and at least half, if not all, of the next speaker’s. This avoids foolish and annoying questions and forces the chairman to ride herd on the following speakers. Remember, the rest of the speakers don’t have anything important to say anyway. If they had, they would have been assigned times earlier than yours. D!
Thursday, March 22, 2007
Thursday, March 01, 2007
RACIOC 22 Highlights Part III

I have spent a significant part of my life attempting to make cyclopropanes and fancy myself rather knowledgeable in this particular area so you can imagine my surprise when Professor Andy Phillips from University of Colorado mentioned the Kulinkovich cyclopropanation out of the blue (talk entitled: "New Reactions and Strategies for the Synthesis of Complex Natural Products"). I have to admit that I was a full-on Kulinkovich virgin. It's a pretty funky reaction producing 1,1,2-trisubstituted hydroxy-cyclopropanes. These are generally not easy to make so I'm surprised I hadn't seen this stuff before. I'm not sure if anyone has attempted to make an asymmetric version of the reaction but in any event using optically active starting materials Professor Phillips Group managed to make optically active stuff (see below).

I didn't get the yield or dr and I don't know if the stuff has been published yet. However, there's a nice entry in Organic Syntheses (OS) on the Kulinkovich cyclopropanation giving two examples (71 and 80% yield to give one diastereoisomer) as well as some background and the mechanism (see mechanistic explanation from OS below).

Tuesday, February 20, 2007
RACIOC 22 Highlights Part II



Also, I never realised that glassware goes acidic at high temperature and hence your polyene will polymerise as mad. The problem can conveniently be solved by adding some propylene oxide to the reaction mixture that will mop any acid up. Long term storage of polyenes is also a problem due to polymerisation. To get around this problem I normally dissolve my diene in hexane or dichloromethane and store it in the freezer. However, an even better way of preserving your compound is to dissolve it in benzene and freezing it in a solid benzene matrix. Finally, I have to mention Dr Matthew Piggot from University of Western Australia. Easily the best presentation that I attended at the conference. Matt gave a talk entitled: "Redesigning the Designer Drug Ecstasy" which was extremely interesting and very well presented. His work is based on the discovery by a young Englishman with Parkinson's disease who discovered that when he went out clubbing and took some Ecstasy virtually all his Parkinson's symptoms went away. He showed some videos of the English dude trying to drink a cuppa tea on placebo and then on ecstasy - the difference was unbelievable.

Sunday, February 18, 2007
RACIOC 22 Highlights Part I



Sunday, January 28, 2007
RACIOC 22

Saturday, December 09, 2006
Adelaide Synthetic Symposium 2006 Part II




Monday, December 04, 2006
Adelaide Synthetic Symposium 2006 Part I

