NMR is useful for detecting any nucleus with integral or half integral spin - the only thing its useless for is a nuclei with no intrinsic spin.
Deuterium NMR is actually fairly useful; the deuterium resonance is used in most modern spectrometers as a lock signal to monitor the drift of the magnetic field in which the spectrum is being taken, and maintain spectra which can be averaged together to get a better signal to noise ratio. It's only because deuterium has a different resonance frequency that it doesn't show up in standard proton NMRs.
Deep Freeze and Centurion work very well for any public labs. You get the benefit of a protected computer (for the most part) while keeping computational power. Centurion has the disadvantage that you can pop open the case and disable it, but Deep Freeze is all software based, and works very well at the University where I work in IS. You can automatically "thaw" the machine at set times to do Windows Updates and Virus Def updates, and lock the keyboard during those times, so the machine stays safe. The library here uses DeepFreeze successfully.
Right, but NT security fixes and support dies at the end of the year. You'd want to do Terminal Services with Server 2003 since you'd be building a new system.
NMR is useful for detecting any nucleus with integral or half integral spin - the only thing its useless for is a nuclei with no intrinsic spin.
Deuterium NMR is actually fairly useful; the deuterium resonance is used in most modern spectrometers as a lock signal to monitor the drift of the magnetic field in which the spectrum is being taken, and maintain spectra which can be averaged together to get a better signal to noise ratio. It's only because deuterium has a different resonance frequency that it doesn't show up in standard proton NMRs.
William Shatner to Star in New Reality TV Series
What does William Shatner know about reality? I've had the feeling he's not been so with it since he decided to cover "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds."
Deep Freeze and Centurion work very well for any public labs. You get the benefit of a protected computer (for the most part) while keeping computational power. Centurion has the disadvantage that you can pop open the case and disable it, but Deep Freeze is all software based, and works very well at the University where I work in IS. You can automatically "thaw" the machine at set times to do Windows Updates and Virus Def updates, and lock the keyboard during those times, so the machine stays safe. The library here uses DeepFreeze successfully.
Right, but NT security fixes and support dies at the end of the year. You'd want to do Terminal Services with Server 2003 since you'd be building a new system.
Agreed. As a chem major, I can attest that molecular modeling doesn't get much better than on a dualie-G5.