Friday, August 14, 2009

Done

All done with work! I managed to wrap everything up into a semi-coherent package for the researcher who's going to be continuing the work, so hopefully the project will go on smoothly.

Last night, the lab took me out to dinner as a goodbye, and they surprised me with a custom-made, hilarious t-shirt (Mastercard "Priceless" ad spoof), EMBL pens, an EMBL USB drive, and A REALLY SLICK EMBL POLO. It's like they've known me all my life. In all seriousness though, everyone here has been so nice to me, which made leaving today pretty sad.

Dad's arriving tomorrow! We fly out to Rome on Monday, then to Paris next Friday, then home on the 26th. I'll see if I can get dad to write a guest column here this weekend before we leave...

Thursday, August 6, 2009

All Quiet on the Science Front

Crisis averted. My PCRs overnight have cleared things up considerably, and the news is pretty good. While I still have to redo some data, it doesn't invalidate everything I've done so far as I had feared. So, well, that's good.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Internet

Oh yeah, tonight I am getting 0.36 Mb/s down with a 70 ms ping to Frankfurt. I suppose this is better than the nights where there's no internet at all, but come on, what is this, the 90's?

Waterskiing Part Deux; Lab Cookout; The Agony and the Ecstasy

On Sunday I went waterskiing with Jan again, and it was a great success; unsurprisingly, it's even more fun when you're able to stand up. I fell at the first turn on my first run, but I did the whole loop on my second run! The best part was definitely letting go of the rope at the end of the loop and just slowly sinking into the water as friction slowly got the best of me. By the end of the day I had made it around the loop four times, so I was pretty pleased with myself.

Yesterday, I gave the presentation at lab meeting (again), and it went pretty well. I wasn't really sure what to make of some of my data, so the talk was very helpful in the sense that it allowed me to put my thoughts in order and get a lot of feedback from people who actually know what they're talking about. The ecstasy: after the meeting, Jan asked me for a writeup of what I've done so far because he's planning on using it in a grant he's writing, and he said it might develop into a paper later. Cool. The agony: today, some of my repeats shed doubt on about half the data I already have, which would imply tens of hours and many hundreds of Euros in enzyme wasted. Not so cool. Needless to say, I'm in a pessimistic mood right now, but hopefully some of the PCRs I have running tonight will provide a clearer picture. Ugh.

Last night, we had a lab BBQ at Jan's. They had pretty much the standard stuff: burgers, (German) sausage, chips, salad, etc. Along with all of the regular lab members, we also had a new postdoc candidate and his wife. He's British; she's Italian. Both seemed very nice, and his talk today about the HHMerThread pipeline he developed was really solid. We have another two postdocs coming in for interviews before I leave, one tomorrow.

In my free time, the last few days have seen me writing and laying out the Freshman week issue of The Princeton Tiger, the humor magazine for which I'm the head writer. Since everyone else on staff is feeling particularly lazy this summer, this issue is mostly mine; I've done the actual writing on literally 90% of the content in it, at least so far. (One of the editors helped out a lot with ideas for probably half of the articles.) Fortunately, the advertising we've been doing to the class of '13 is paying off; I have a ton of interested recruits emailing me.

So that's the long and the short of what I've been up to lately. Excuse me while I go do laundry and mope about my data.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Munich

Sorry this update has taken me so long, but I have been mad busy. Tuesday night I saw Harry Potter; best Potter film yet, though still nothing near LOTR levels of goodness. Monday night I went over to Adrian's house for an epic Guitar Hero battle. Katharina made authentic Austrian Apfelstrudel, and we tried to make it through "Through the Fire and the Flames" on medium difficulty. We made it, but barely. All in all, great week.

But back to Munich.

On Friday, I left early in the morning for the main train station, the Hauptbahnhof. I arrived at the station at 8 am, even though my train wasn't until 10 am; I'm just neurotic like that, especially when it comes to travel. Basically, I listened to podcasts and twiddled my thumbs.

My first train was a short ride to Mannheim, then I switched to a larger train direct to Munich. The second train was very very nice; it felt like an airplane, but with much more leg room. After some work finding my seat, I settled in for a two-hour ride to Munich. Barring one minor moment that could have been disastrous if I had been stupid enough to get off the train (München Pasing is definitely NOT München Hbf.), the ride was uneventful.

I arrived in Munich's massive train station around 1:30 pm and headed straight to the hostel to drop off my bag. It was a short 10 minute walk from the station, so I didn't bother with the tram system, the S-bahn. I checked in and left by bag at the hostel, then headed out into the city.

The first order of business was transportation. I bought a three-day MVV (Munich's public tranport system) pass for 12 Euro, which was surprisingly cheap compared to the individual fares (2 Euro per ride). It turned out to be a real money saver.

Following the advice of my invaluable Frommers guidebook to Germany (which pretty much made the trip ~732 times more enjoyable), I first headed to Marienplatz, the city's center (pedestrian-only!). There I saw the Karlstor ("Karl's gate" for you non-German folks), the Neues Rathaus ("New Town Hall," "new" being a relative term) with its famous Glockenspiel, Frauenkirche, Peterskirche, and Michaelskirche (churches). I climbed every tower I could find, and took a bunch of pictures.

That night, I met my roommates for the evening at the hostel: a Chinese couple in their mid-forties and their ten-year-old son, who all live in Austria; a young Spanish couple from Madrid (I think the girl was 17); and another Spaniard in his mid-twenties. I spent the evening translating from Spanish to English and back again so that the Spanish and Austro-Chinese halves of the room could communicate. I talked a bit with the Madridians (mostly in Spanish, since my Spanish is better than their English), and it was a pretty cool evening.

The next day I left early in the morning for Schloss Nymphenburg (Nymphenburg Castle), which was the summer retreat for the German Electors, and later the Holy Roman Emperor (?). It's built in an Italian villa style, and it is SO pretty. I took an audiotour of the interior, which is done in a ludicrously ornate style. I then walked around the 500-acre (!) gardens, and looked inside some of the other mansions hidden on the grounds. Most had plain exteriors that belied their awesomely-ornate rococo interiors. This visit was probably my favorite part of the trip.

Next, I toured the Residenz, which was the daily residence for Germany's kings over the years. This one was truly massive, and all of the rooms eventually started to blend together. Highlights: the collection of holy relics, including John the Baptist's skull; the Antiquarium, a gorgeous banquet hall; and the Ancestral Gallery, a gilded hall of portraits (think Hall of Mirrors, with paintings instead of mirrors).

On the same ticket as the Residenz, I also had access to the royal treasury and the Cuvillies theater, so I decided to check them out. The treasury had, well, treasure. My favorite part? The solid gold statue of St. George on horseback that was literally covered in diamonds and rubys. The Cuvillies theater was also neat; it's a rococo theater from the time of the electors.

Next, I decided to head a few minutes out of town to see the concentration camp at Dachau. The visit went about as you would expect: terribly cheery, and loaded with museums and documentaries. It started to rain as I was walking around the grounds, but it felt appropriate. Somehow, Dachau wouldn't have seemed right in the sun. I didn't have time to take a guided tour, but it was depressing enough even without a guide.

After an hour wait for a bus back to the S-bahn that took me back to Munich, I went to the Hofbräuhaus for dinner. This is Munich's famous beer hall where Hitler jumped up on a table to outline his ideas, but it's also simply a gathering spot for locals and tourists alike. They sell their classic beer in one size and one size only -- a massive barrel-like mug that only a Münchener could consider to be a sane unit of volume for beer. I had Weiβwürste, a traditional white Bavarian sausage, and it was fantastic.

After dinner, I walked around the Englischer Garten for a bit, which is Munich's massive park. It turns out it was a good thing that I only had time to go at dusk; that way I did not accidentally stumble into the part of the park where Germans of the FKK persuasion sunbathe on warm afternoons. (FKK stands for Freikörperkultur, which roughly means "Free body culture." And they are very "free." With their bodies. In public.) It would have certainly been a sight to behold, but I had little desire to see old sweaty Germans as nature intended. I then took the U-bahn (subway) to Olympic Park, saw the stadium from the '72 games, and went back to the hostel.

On Sunday, I toured the Deutsches Museum and the Alte Pinakothek (Old Art Museum). The Deutsches Museum is one of Germany's largest science and technology museums. I saw the original V2 rocket, the bench on which the first atom was split, and original Leeuwenhoek microscopes. Pretty cool. After I finished there, I swung by the Alte Pinakothek until I had to catch the train home. The museum had works by Rafael, Da Vinci, Rembrandt, and it was incredibly well put together. I was very impressed, and I spent probably four hours just wandering around in there.

So, in short, I had a great trip. Traveling alone definitely let me see much much more and be more flexible than I could have possibly been in a group, so that was nice. I probably saw a week's work of stuff in 48 hours, which was pretty impressive.

As always, all-new 100% natural organic photos may be found here.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Coming Soon

An update, as haiku:

Munich was awesome.
Much too busy to blog now.
Updates soon. (Tonight?)

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Munich, Predeparture

Long time since I've posted! The has been the result of the confluence of a number of factors:
  1. The internet has been spotty
  2. Blogging is work
  3. I've been busy
  4. Nothing much out of the ordinary has happened
But all of this is about to change! I am headed to Munich for the weekend, so I should have plenty of photos and stories when I return. I'll try not to die, and it should be fun.

More updates soon.