Mastodon

Richard Hendricks Wins First Place in the Wowchemy Prize

Congratulations to Richard Hendricks for winning first place in the Wowchemy Prize.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer tempus augue non tempor egestas. Proin nisl nunc, dignissim in accumsan dapibus, auctor ullamcorper neque. Quisque at elit felis. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia curae; Aenean eget elementum odio. Cras interdum eget risus sit amet aliquet. In volutpat, nisl ut fringilla dignissim, arcu nisl suscipit ante, at accumsan sapien nisl eu eros.

Sed eu dui nec ligula bibendum dapibus. Nullam imperdiet auctor tortor, vel cursus mauris malesuada non. Quisque ultrices euismod dapibus. Aenean sed gravida risus. Sed nisi tortor, vulputate nec quam non, placerat porta nisl. Nunc varius lobortis urna, condimentum facilisis ipsum molestie eu. Ut molestie eleifend ligula sed dignissim. Duis ut tellus turpis. Praesent tincidunt, nunc sed congue malesuada, mauris enim maximus massa, eget interdum turpis urna et ante. Morbi sem nisl, cursus quis mollis et, interdum luctus augue. Aliquam laoreet, leo et accumsan tincidunt, libero neque aliquet lectus, a ultricies lorem mi a orci.

Mauris dapibus sem vel magna convallis laoreet. Donec in venenatis urna, vitae sodales odio. Praesent tortor diam, varius non luctus nec, bibendum vel est. Quisque id sem enim. Maecenas at est leo. Vestibulum tristique pellentesque ex, blandit placerat nunc eleifend sit amet. Fusce eget lectus bibendum, accumsan mi quis, luctus sem. Etiam vitae nulla scelerisque, eleifend odio in, euismod quam. Etiam porta ullamcorper massa, vitae gravida turpis euismod quis. Mauris sodales sem ac ultrices viverra. In placerat ultrices sapien. Suspendisse eu arcu hendrerit, luctus tortor cursus, maximus dolor. Proin et velit et quam gravida dapibus. Donec blandit justo ut consequat tristique.

Edit this page

Andre Maia Chagas
Andre Maia Chagas
Lecturer in Open Science

I’m passionate about open science and open source hardware, and how those two can be used to increase research and education reach around the world. I have a background in Neurosciences and have been developing affordable open science hardware and teaching others to do so via workshops, talks and outreach events. I started Open Neuroscience, and volunteer at Trend in Africa as an open source adviser and by organizing and running Open Labware workshops. Currently I work at the Department of Neurosciences in the University of Sussex, where I develop equipment to support research labs. For more details on those projects check the Open Sussex Neuroscience page On my spare time I offer consultancy services around open science hardware through Prometheus Science. If you need to replicate a methods paper, or if you’d like something custom built for your lab, get in touch!

Next
Previous