"Astounded," "blown away," "astonished." Has there been another recent example in #chemistry of people going so nuts about a new advance? http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/10/new-day-chemistry-molecular-ct-scan-could-dramatically-speed-drug-discovery … Independent reports by European team and @TheNelsonLab @gonenlab @thestoltzgroup
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Replying to @lilaguterman @SilverVVulpes and
The serendipity/adjacent-field here sounds interesting. 'This technique works really well on my kind of chemicals.' [moves to another field] 'Does it work on any others, like ours?' 'Dunno. Let's try it?' [NARRATOR: 'The short answer is it did.']
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Replying to @gwern @lilaguterman and
I'm not saying we should force scientists to attend a completely unrelated sub-field conference for every other 3 conferences they sign up for voluntarily, I'm just saying I have no other good ideas to make this happen more often
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Clearly we need to upload the brains of all scientists to a computer, and swap hemispheres at random and ask the AIs, 'well? you think of anything interesting?'
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