@CJ: What about the spot where folks leave behind keys, cell phones, or wallets? Yes, it occurs elsewhere, not just the NMR room.
My grad program had walk-up mass spec (ESI, GC-MS, LC-MS, and MALDI). The biggest annoyance was when someone froze the sampling queue by using an invalid character in the sample name. Fortunately, I convinced the facilities director to teach me how to reset the queues. Guess whose sample got pushed to the back...
These are gross violations of safety. That waste bottle on the floor needs to be placed in that cardboard box to act as a secondary container in case of an earthquake. Only then will you be safe.
What's the job market like for chemists? Dude -- it's always bad.
How bad is it? How the heck should I know? Quantifying the chemistry job market is what this blog is about. That, and helping chemists find jobs somehow.
E-mail chemjobber with helpful tips or angry comments at chemjobber -at- gmail dotcom.
@CJ: What about the spot where folks leave behind keys, cell phones, or wallets? Yes, it occurs elsewhere, not just the NMR room.
ReplyDeleteMy grad program had walk-up mass spec (ESI, GC-MS, LC-MS, and MALDI). The biggest annoyance was when someone froze the sampling queue by using an invalid character in the sample name. Fortunately, I convinced the facilities director to teach me how to reset the queues. Guess whose sample got pushed to the back...
love it!
ReplyDeleteThese are gross violations of safety. That waste bottle on the floor needs to be placed in that cardboard box to act as a secondary container in case of an earthquake. Only then will you be safe.
ReplyDelete