Received: from EDRC.CMU.EDU by ux4.sp.cs.cmu.edu id ab17164; 18 Mar 98 23:39 EST Received: from mail1.eni.net by EDRC.CMU.EDU id aa11192; 18 Mar 98 23:38:47 EST Received: from asura ([206.135.194.194]) by mail1.eni.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with SMTP id UAA05320; Wed, 18 Mar 1998 20:39:31 -0800 (PST) From: "David Chapman" To: Subject: wanted: Lisp hacker to help discover new medicines (San Francisco) Date: Wed, 18 Mar 1998 20:48:23 -0800 Message-ID: <01bd52f2$3f90a810$c2c287ce@asura.afferent.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 4.71.1712.3 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V4.71.1712.3 Sender: ai+@ux4.sp.cs.cmu.edu At Afferent Systems, Inc., we're looking for an expert Lisp hacker to help build software that aids in the discovery of new drugs. You can read all about what we do at www.afferent.com. The short version is, the pharmaceutical industry has recently discovered that you can make and test candidate drugs a whole lot faster using robots than by hand. They are getting a 100x increase in throughput and a 100x decrease in cost. So a whole lot of money is being spent on automating drug discovery. Luckily for us, chemists aren't good at programming robots. So they need intelligent software that can talk chemistry to chemists and robotese to robots. Also, now that they are making and testing 100x as many chemicals as previously, they are swamped with data. Their data management tools are completely inadequate. These problems aren't too hard to solve if you know Lisp! Luckily for us, we know Lisp, so we're solving the drug discovery industry's problems, and they are sending us lots of money. We like that; and they like it too, because then they get to discover drugs and make a whole lot more money! And everyone else benefits, because the current pace of drug discovery is pathetically slow. Amazingly, there are more new diseases discovered every year than there are new drugs. With pre-robotic technology, humans are losing and the germs are winning. Hopefully, with robots we'll turn this around. So, what's this got to do with you? Well, luckily, you know Lisp. So maybe you can help... What we need is an expert Lisp hacker -- someone who has built large systems, and can produce reliable code quickly. That probably means at least a Master's degree in CS and industrial experience, but those are not absolutely required. Any of the following additions would be a significant plus: -- a PhD -- a background in chemistry or biology -- expertise in complex GUI programming -- knowledge of the Windows API -- familiarity with tcl/tk -- background in relational databases (ODBC, SQL, Oracle) We'll invent a title for you depending on your background and what exactly you are going to be doing. (Small companies can be flexible in giving people snazzy titles.) We're looking for a full-time person (or maybe two), but may have work for a contractor as well. Afferent is a small startup located in San Francisco. If you are interested, send me a resume via email (chapman@afferent.com) or fax (415-252-8610) or to 2005 16th Street, San Francisco CA 94103. David Chapman ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This message | Submissions ai+lisp-jobs@cs.cmu.edu was sent via | Subscribe/Unsubscribe ai+query@cs.cmu.edu the LISP-JOBS | Available mailing lists include mailing list. | AI-JOBS, LISP-JOBS, PROLOG-JOBS, AI-POSTDOC, AI-PREDOC