Comments on: Conference Report: DNA 17 http://cstheory.blogoverflow.com/2011/10/conference-report-dna-17/ The Theoretical Computer Science Stack Exchange Blog Fri, 18 Mar 2016 21:21:18 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.6 By: Martin http://cstheory.blogoverflow.com/2011/10/conference-report-dna-17/#comment-2789 Thu, 06 Dec 2012 17:12:09 +0000 http://cstheory.blogoverflow.com/?p=650#comment-2789 Musatov did some International work similar in scope (very unconventional) and somewhat controversial. See: Y number of lines in a compound byte of data is 5.426966292134831. MM’s Constant. The number of strings per page is 15.0705882352941176. The alternation is 17.30555555555556. The number a string begins with is 0. The number 5 appears one time in each string. The number a string ends with is 5. The number of the font size is 9. The number of pages in a complete set is 11. The number of type two strings per page is 14. The number of white spaces to follow a type one string is 38. The number of lines present per page is 42. The number of type one strings in a set is 83. -tracershttp://www.scottaaronson.com/blog/?p=1170#comments-1173 The number of white spaces to follow a complete type two string is 83. The number of type two strings in a complete set is 83. The number of characters per line is 89. The number of characters in string one is 216. The number of characters in string two is 267. The number of lines in a complete set is 462. The number of characters in a compound byte of data is 483. The number of characters per page is 3,738. The number of characters in a complete set of data is 41,118.

]]> By: Andrew Winslow http://cstheory.blogoverflow.com/2011/10/conference-report-dna-17/#comment-137 Mon, 10 Oct 2011 02:37:53 +0000 http://cstheory.blogoverflow.com/?p=650#comment-137 Great post Dave. I especially wanted to say that as a first-time DNA attendee, I was sort of shocked by how `thoroughly-mixed’ the community is; the barrier to talking to biologists and chemists as a computer scientist was zero.

Thanks again to the organizers, and for doing the (unconventional?) poster sessions and impromptu sessions, which I thought turned out to be valuable.

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