When you edit files in different formats every day, the universality of your document tools matters a lot. If your tools work for only some of the popular formats, you might find yourself switching between application windows to void circle in VIA and handle other file formats. If you want to eliminate the headache of document editing, get a platform that can effortlessly handle any extension.
With DocHub, you do not need to concentrate on anything apart from actual document editing. You won’t need to juggle applications to work with different formats. It can help you modify your VIA as effortlessly as any other extension. Create VIA documents, modify, and share them in a single online editing platform that saves you time and boosts your productivity. All you have to do is register a free account at DocHub, which takes just a few minutes or so.
You won’t need to become an editing multitasker with DocHub. Its feature set is enough for fast document editing, regardless of the format you want to revise. Start by registering a free account to see how easy document management might be with a tool designed specifically to suit your needs.
and so good evening and welcome to the latest installment of the slack public lectures So today were very happy to have Peter Dahlberg whos doing some oh really beautiful stuff that Im sure youll be eager to learn about uh Peter got his bachelors degree from McGill and then came to the University of Chicago and got into the biophysics lab there where he did some uh quite interesting Imaging projects and then after that he came out here to Stanford in 2016 to work with actually two of our Imaging Giants here at Stanford uh wachu who is a big expert in whats called um cryo electron microscopy and W.E merner whos actually a Nobel Prize winner for um whats called super resolution spectroscopy and the question is whether you could actually bring these things together and learn more and more about the inner workings of cells so thats what Peter will talk to you about today and uh oh one more thing um in 2021 Peter was awarded our panovsky fellowship which is very competitive but le