Pierre pointed me to Google’s view:timeline feature, which shows the search results on a time line, by recognizing phrases like “on 25 September 2000…”. This is its view on the Chemistry Development Kit:
Pierre pointed me to Google’s view:timeline feature, which shows the search results on a time line, by recognizing phrases like “on 25 September 2000…”. This is its view on the Chemistry Development Kit:
A couple of people now confirmed the problem with the ACS journal RSS feeds . Being back behind my desktop machine, I can post the obligatory screenshot:
I was just about to install Subclipse (for the millionth time), and googled for the update site details:
The second Programmeerzomer and the second summer of code for me, will end tomorrow with a presentation of Niels on his new JChemPaint code. The summer is over before you know it. One of the goals was making the JChemPaint editor Swing independent and more easy to integrate with SWT widgets.
Using the InChI and the new rdf.openmolecules.net website, it is now possible to tag molecules. And if you use Connotea for that, your tags will even show up on the rdf.openmolecules.net website. For example, at the time of writing, methane was tagged with alkanes and gas.
All start is difficult. The ACS must know that, but they still blame Google.
Amanda had a very nice post on Small molecules that modulate quorum sensing. It’s the perfect read for a Sunday morning, when you have a view looking down on Strasbourg from a hill in the Black Forrest. Biology fascinates me, particularly when small molecules are involved. And the molecular signaling used by these bacteria is just delightful. Make sure to read up on the small squids in 96-well plates too! (And we are worried about varkensflats!
Rich posted a nice quote the other day on the introduction of the forward pass in football some 100 years ago, and linked that to sciences.
The IUPAC/NIST team made a beta release of the next InChI software release:
Peter has been doing an excellent job in advocating ODOSOS , and one of his posts even hit Slashdot.
Niels and I held a JChemPaint hack-a-thon today (the IRC log). We had a quite ambitious agenda: