Dennis Özcelik
Did you ever wonder where all the drugs, which you can get at a pharmacy, come from? Who makes them, and how? Well, there is no easy answer, because the process of drug discovery and development is a very complex, expensive, and challenging journey, riddled with many risks and failures. This holds true for all types of drugs, from a simple pill to an mRNA vaccine or a gene therapy. Today, scientists support this process with a variety of AI applications, cutting-edge technologies, automation, and a huge amount of data. But can the race for new medicines and cures succeed only through more technology, or do we need to rethink the entire process? Let’s take a look at how the drug discovery and development process has worked so far, and how this entire process is changing – for better or worse.
MarKuster
Science advances by extending our senses beyond the limits of human perception, pushing the boundaries of what we can observe. In photon science, imaging detectors serve as the eyes of science, translating invisible processes into measurable and analysable data. Behind every image lies a deep understanding of how detectors see, respond and perform. At facilities like the European XFEL, the world's most powerful X-ray free-electron laser located in the Hamburg metropolitan area, imaging detectors capture ultrashort X-ray flashes at MHz frame rates and with high dynamic range. Without these advanced detectors, even the brightest X-ray laser beam would remain invisible. They help to reveal what would otherwise stay hidden, such as the structure of biomolecules, the behaviour of novel materials, and matter under extreme conditions. But how do we know they will perform as expected? And how do we design systems capable of “seeing” the invisible? I will take a closer look how imaging technology in large-scale facilities is simulated and designed to make the invisible visible. From predicting detector performance to evaluating image quality, we look at how performance simulation helps scientists and engineers understand the “eyes” of modern science.
Katja Ruge
„Planetary Visions“ with Katja Ruge (Can Love Be Synth/Synthesizerstudio HH, Electric Lights/Planetarium HH) Katja Ruge’s DJ sets are a seamless fusion of Italo, New Wave, Cosmic Sounds, 80s, Dark Disco, and Electro.
RSS Disco
From crackling Kraut and Disco records to hyper produced Techno tracks - dance music has come a long way in the last six decades, and was always strongly influenced by evolving technology. Dance music’s history is a feedback system between culture and circuitry. Each new invention—from the disco subwoofer to today’s neural-driven mastering tools—reshapes sound itself. RSS Disco’s timeline approach celebrates this continuum: a story of machines learning to groove, and humans learning to listen differently through them.
Steve
Als Part der ToxicFamily, die seit mittlerweile 25 Jahren Label, elektronisches Magazin, Veranstalter und einfach eine Institution in Frankfurt ist, fördert Steve, der übrigens einer der dienstältesten Residents des Tanzhaus West in Frankfurt ist, aktiv die Frankfurter Underground Clubszene und vor allem den Nachwuchs. Ob es ein Gig bei der Toxic Family Radio Show im lokalen FM Radio ist, ein CDJ Lehrgang oder einfach nur aufmunterte Worte während eines Sets - viele Frankfurter DJs haben eine Geschichte über Steve zu erzählen. Wenn Steve House Musik spielt, sieht man oft DJ Kollegen mit gespitzen Ohren an der Bar stehen - oder auch mal mitten auf der Tanzfläche - weil das Barpersonal selbst auf der Theke tanzt.
Festnacht
Festnacht is a fixture in Hamburg’s music scene. Together with L.F.T., he has steered the Neoprimitive label and event series for nearly a decade, releasing a broad range of mostly experimental electronic music from artists like Rosaceae, Children of Leir, and Alobhe, and inviting names such as Skee Mask, Anthony Rother, Bloody Mary, and Interstellar Funk to the iconic Golden Pudel Club. His DJ sets span the spectrum of Detroit-rooted techno and electro - always unpredictable, shaped by the night’s energy, and known for his skill in slowly and subtly warming up a room.
bushfya
For the Love of Music. Nothing else.
Afidissima & Alice
Afidissima and Alice, two millennial stereotypes sharing music tips as emotional currency. Gabby radio host Afidissima delivers genre-chaotic sets drenched in dubby vibes and oozing with groove. A relentless cratedigger with questionable priorities. Alice unites musical moments and moods that refuse to be united. Seductive, whimsical, followed by familiar paths, so as not to upset the ear and inner balance. Mixed feelings becoming multiple emotions. Everything as usual – just enhanced momentum.
BarbNerdy
Sharing Means Caring: Most of the music of this series was recorded at a Chaos Event in the last 10 (or more) years. It is time for a new episode: https://soundcloud.com/barbnerdy/sets/mixtape-sharing-means-caring-1
Dj Sloush aka Spitz + Zarrt
The berlin based artist duo is working under different alias solo, in duos or collectives since 2011. They are sound artists, DJs, part of Cashmere Radio (Berlin), curators, event organizers, performers and multimedia artists. “Dj Sloush aka Spitz + Zarrt aka Fellmaus will make you happy. There’s gonna be these sounds coming from the speakers, new otherworldly ones mixed with seemingly familiar yet undiscovered natural feeling waves of moods, or maybe hot and twirling rapid fire bass jumping trippin balls ones. Either way they’ll provide you with a guaranteed enjoyment of the infinite kind.”
Sassi
service for dance trips ⏰✨💫⏰✨💫⏰✨💫⏰✨💫 zocke für euch housy rave essentials mit nostalgischen vocals und acid lines & mache sachen bei @diskobabel 💕 und @entropiefestival ⚡️
Hamdi
Hamdi (Berlin) House and minimal techno built for immersion. Extended mixes, controlled pacing, and Fog-filled rooms where the story unfolds gradually.