Go To my home-page, do not pass go, do not collect 200 pounds. Go to my chemistry stuff.  Do not drink the potion. Go to my computing stuff, geek stink breath. Go to my Scouting stuff - with no sign of a dib-dib anywhere. Go to my aardvark stuff, meow - sorry wrong sound. --Click your thing on here.
Welcome to my Home-page
Don't let reality spoil your day.

Welcome to my new home-page. This is definitely under construction. Perhaps if you give me a week or two, there may (very possibly) be one of the best web pages you've ever seen. On the other hand, I doubt it. In the mean-time, tap your mouse on the navigation bar up at the top of my pages to be whipped around a whistle-stop tour of my pages in their current state of evolution.

Remember: You can remove most screws by applying anti-clockwise torque to their heads. You have been warned!

Me:
If you are interested (Which I'm happy to accept isn't very likely) here is a picture-thing of me. It's actually a few months old, but I do still look vaguely like this. (Except, of course, I'm not black-and-white in real life.)

Sarah
And, here is Sarah. I was told that although I should have wanted to, I couldn't put a photograph of Sarah on my Web-page. I don't think this can be classed as a photo by any stretch of the imagination. I bet that I get in trouble for this...


My favourite links
Here is a temporary list of some links that I'm currently claiming to be my 'favourites':
I don't expect anything here to work, so if I were you, you won't either.

Sheffield Uni This is my University, for a while longer at least.
The Perl Language Home Page Camels and so on.
Sun's Java tutorial I don't particularly use Java, but this is vaguely interesting anyway.
SavvySearch One of the better search engines (Well, it's one of the two which I use)
Chemistry at the University of Sheffield My chemistry department.
Daylight Chemical Information Systems The people who bring us the Daylight toolkit. Prehaps not very interesting to the average web-surfer, but useful for computational chemists.
SMILES Home-page Tutorials and information about SMILES, a typographical method for representing molecular structure. Check-out the depict utility.
Silicon Surf The Silicon Graphics pages. Crash (sorry).
Web Elements An excellent web-based periodic table maintained by Dr Mark Winter at the University of Sheffield.
Nature The online version of the journal.
1st Norwich (Capt. Bower's Own) Sea Scouts The 1st Norwich Home-page. That's my old Scout Troop, that is. I now help out at the 296th Sheffield Scout Troop. But, they don't have a web presence... yet ;-)
icon bazaar This is a good place to pick-up that icon you need for your desktop or web page.
FutureNet - Computing Future Publishing's Computer stuff
CNS Home Page My old Sixth-Form centre
Linux Online The Linux Home Page
FreeBSD Inc. A 'rock-stable' alternative to Linux.
The University of Sheffield Library My library. I don't really think this will be interesting to you.
C++ for Biomolecular Scientists Materials for a course offered by Birbeck College.
A Guide to Structure Prediction A nicely produced tutorial on protein structure prediction.
AltaVista: Main Page (digital) Digital's (or Compaq's?) AltaVista search engine. The Palo Alto site has the best version, but it's located in the US.
AltaVista: Advanced Query (telia) The northern European AltaVista search site. Version for advanced queries.
AltaVista: Simple Query (telia) As above, except the version for simple queries.
AltaVista Quick Help (telia) Instructions for the AltaVista search engine.
Numerical Recipes in C (postscript) The entire Numerical Recipes in C book is available for download, in the postscript format. I find this an invaluable resource.
Numerical Recipes in C (acrobat) Numerical recipes in the Adobe Acrobat format.
HTML 3.2 HTML 3.2 reference specification. This can be used as a handy reminder of all the HTML tags that you keep forgeting.


Footnote
Incidentally, I believe that these pages are viewed using Netscape 4. That's the browser that I choose to use anyway. And... it is now free again, so you have absolutely no excuse for not even trying it.

If you want, you can email me at: [email protected]

This page has been visited times, but who really cares?
This page was created by Stewart Adcock (That's me!) on 12th March. It may have been updated since then, but if it has I haven't altered this message. I probably forgot.