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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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Blue-obeliskOpenscienceCdkCmlBioclipseChemieEnglisch
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OpenSource, OpenData and OpenStandards are not as strong in chemoinformatics as they are in bioinformatcs, where it is common knowledge that sharing is a good. Today, the JCIM published on the web an article about the Blue Obelisk movement, which promotes these three idealogies. Several open source projects participate, amongst which the CDK, Jmol, JOELib, OpenBabel, Chemical Markup Language, Bioclipse and Kalzium.

CmlSemwebChemieEnglisch
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You might have read earlier posts in this blog on CMLRSS, and received a question today on how to integrate CMLRSS with blogs on blogspot.com. Now, current CMLRSS feeds are normally generated with customized scripts, often directly from a database. So, here’s my attempt to include CML in a blogspot.com blog. OpenBabel 2.0 can create good CML, for example for acetic acid: Nothing much to see, right?

CdkCmlBioinfoChemieEnglisch
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Gemma Holiday’s article on CMLReact was published in the january issue of the JCIM (doi:10.1021/ci0502698), which seems to be marked as sample issue right now. She used CMLReact as data format for MACiE (see doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/bti693), a database of 100 enzyme reactions, with fully annotated reaction mechanisms, making this an remarkable and insightfull database.

BioinfoCbSemwebChemieEnglisch
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Roland Krause discussed today in his blog Notes from the Biomass an interesting website: postgenomic.com . This website, still marked BETA, mines blogs in the field of genomics and extract noteworthy statistics from it: which articles are cited in those blogs. For example, the most discussed article is Kai Wang’s Gene-function wiki would let biologists pool worldwide resources in Nature.

LinuxJavaCdkJmolChemieEnglisch
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This weekend I continued my work on getting the CDK and Jmol run with free, open source JVMs. Really, a lot works fine, as reported earlier in this blog: JChemPaint works and Jmol almost works (see the Classpath’s FreeSwingTestApps wiki page), and well over 95% of the CDK JUnit tests run without trouble too. So it comes down to identifying what does not run properly, and file bugs for this. For example, 26101 and 26108.

CheminfChemometricsBioinfoTechnoratiChemieEnglisch
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If you have read my previous post and visited that other blog, you might have noted the Technorati keywords . Or tags, really, as explained in this rel=”tag” microformat. Adding them to blog items, will enable indexing by Technorati, one of the bigger blog search engines. So, from now on, you’ll see these tags in my items too, hoping they don’t get annoying.

ChemieEnglisch
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I never got around to mentioning this blog, but YAKAFOKON is a nice blog about, as the titel already says, bioinformatics, the semantic web and social networks. Nice to read, and interesting comments on the function and features of the internet and how they relate to bioinformatics, and science in general. Recommended!

LinuxChemieEnglisch
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Because I wanted to test internet telephony I downloaded Skype and tried to get it to work on my Kubuntu system. Unfortunately, the Skype version is only 1.2.0.18, and it does not work well with arts :( That is, using artsdsp it crashes with segfaults whenever I start even a chat, let alone a phone call. This could be worked around by disabling sound in my KDE session, and then the /dev/dsp is open again.

ChemieEnglisch
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Recently, a Dutch version of Google News was started, and might mean a replacement for nu.nl. I do not like the verbose layout much, because it makes it more difficult to scan headlines. I do like the themes. Except for one. The English theme ‘Sci/Tech’ is Wetenschap in the Dutch version, or plain Science. And it annoys me to read IT headlines when looking up scientific news.

JmolPublishingChemieEnglisch
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Today I received news on the Jmol user list that Lubert Stryer’s Biochemistry replaced the proprietary Chime with the open source Jmol. The third edition from which I learned biochemistry in my first year at the university did not feature a CD with live figures, but I am very thrilled to see a program on which I have actively programmed hit a text book I used myself in the past.