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chem-bla-ics

chem-bla-ics
Chemblaics (pronounced chem-bla-ics) is the science that uses open science and computers to solve problems in chemistry, biochemistry and related fields.
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OpenlabChemical Sciences
Published

The results for the Open Lab 2007 are out . I participated in this endeavor as judge, and read 75 of the 486 blog items, focusing on the sections chemistry, blogging, publishing, politics of science, and a number of blog items with few reviews when I passed them.

BioclipseOpenscienceChemical Sciences
Published

Ola blogged about something he is working on for Bioclipse2. The next major series of Bioclipse releases will use the RCP-based resource architecture, which allows better integrating with other RCP plugins, such as the Subclipse plugin which allows one to browse Subversion repositories directly in Bioclipse. That is cool! Check out the screenshot he posted in his blog.

BioclipseUserscriptChemical Sciences
Published

Our Christmas tree has not been decorated yet, but the presents are there: the BMC Bioinformatics paper on userscripts in life sciences, Bioclipse 1.2.0, a long list of blogs to rate, and a very nice overview from Wendy Warr on workflow environments, discussing and comparing different offerings like Pipeline Pilot, Taverna, and KNIME.

CdkChemical Sciences
Published

The Chemistry Development Kit has never really been without any bugs, which is reflected in the number of failing JUnit tests. For trunk/ this is today 106 failing tests (live stats). The stable cdk-1.0.x/ branch, however, the number of failing tests is not much lower: 64 failing tests today (live stats).

BioinfoJchempaintJmolBioclipseChemical Sciences
Published

I was pleased to hear that Christoph will move to the EBI early next year. Christoph has been working on Open Source and Open Data chemoinformatics since at least 1997. I first got in contact with Christoph when I wrote code for JChemPaint (which Christoph developed) to be able to read Chemical Markup Languages (CML). This also got me into contact with Dan Gezelter who is the original author of Jmol, to which I also added CML support.