Rich just posted an interesting read on Web-Centric Science, after a gauntlet thrown down by The Realm of Organic Synthesis (TROS).
I do not typically make complaints in my blog, so consider this a request for advice in good practices ;)
ChemSpider has set up embeddable chemistry widget (per Cameron’s idea), much like YouTube. I just have to try that.
I gave this 10 minute presentation on MetWare this afternoon at the International Metabolomics Workshop :
Git is nice. Nicer to some than to other, that is true. GitReady just learned me how to calculate commit message in a few seconds: git shortlog -s -n. For the whole Bioclipse and CDK commit history. Seconds. Here they are.
On Monday I showed two screenshot showing our new XMPP-based web/cloud services in action inside Taverna.
Richard Kidd wrote in the ChemistryWorldBlog about Henry Rzepa to have published two papers in RSC journals where Jmol is part of the main paper, after having used Jmol in extra material in ACS journals before. The key here is that the Jmol is part of the official text… when you open the paper in a browser, you immediately get to see the Jmol live, 3D graphics! Well, so it is said in the blog.
As you might have read, Bioclipse has scripting support (see for example, Scripting JChemPaint ), and that we have been collection them on Gist and indexing them on Delicious with the tags bioclipse and gist. This provides a nice overview of what you can do with the current SVN version of Bioclipse2. And, hopefully, when released, allow users to quickly learn about Bioclipse features, allow people to share scripts etc.
With the general framework set up for editing and validation of CML documents , it was fairly easy to support the PubChem XML file format schema too.