Hi,
Do you think there is enough demand for "generic" chemical Web themes, ie the technology and sociology of chemistry on the Web? Or should it focus on chemical education? I am trying to inch towards an "identity" for the conference, and hence the audience.
I'd be nice to include chemical education as well, in order to gain a larger audience. Some aspects of the technology we're discussing (eg lecture presentation, on-line tutorials, lecture-note archiving, standards for chemical structures and spectra), would be common to the teaching of a number of other science (and medical) subjects, so by including this we'd be breaking new ground and doing the whole academic community a service. We might want to contact CTICC (Computers in teaching initiative centre for Chemistry) at Liverpool, and their equivalents in say, Physics, & Medicine to see if they're interested. Maybe the CTI could orgainise a web conference, and we produce a Chemistry parallel symposium? ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr Paul May, School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, UK tel: +44 (0)117 9287667, fax: +44 (0)117 9251295 email: paul.may@bris.ac.uk WWW: http://www.bris.ac.uk/Depts/Chemistry/staff/pwm.htm "Another squashed hedgehog in the gutter of the information superhighway" ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- chemweb: A list for Chemical Applications of the Internet. To unsubscribe, send to listserver@ic.ac.uk the following message; unsubscribe chemweb List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (rzepa@ic.ac.uk)
On Thu, 7 Dec 1995, Paul May wrote:
Hi,
Do you think there is enough demand for "generic" chemical Web themes, ie the technology and sociology of chemistry on the Web? Or should it focus on chemical education? I am trying to inch towards an "identity" for the conference, and hence the audience.
I'd be nice to include chemical education as well, in order to gain a larger audience. Some aspects of the technology we're discussing (eg lecture presentation, on-line tutorials, lecture-note archiving, standards for chemical structures and spectra), would be common to the teaching of a number of other science (and medical) subjects, so by including this we'd be breaking new ground and doing the whole academic community a service. We might want to contact CTICC (Computers in teaching initiative centre for Chemistry) at Liverpool, and their equivalents in say, Physics, & Medicine to see if they're interested. Maybe the CTI could orgainise a web conference, and we produce a Chemistry parallel symposium?
I think that one step that is really necessary is a properly structured approach to hypermaterial - i.e. it needs meta-data (indexing, etc) and it should be generated in a better markup language than HTML - preferably SGML (I'm biassed!). At present I'm editing my Internet course and the pethora of styles and authors is a nightmare. We also need tools for analysing slef-consistenscy, generating TOCs, etc. P.,
Peter Murray-Rust, Glaxo Research & Dev. (pmr1716@ggr.co.uk); (BioMOO: PeterMR) Birkbeck College, ubcg09q@cryst.bbk.ac.uk, CBMT/Daresbury mbglx@seqnet.dl.ac.uk http://www.cryst.bbk.ac.uk/PPS/index.html, http://www.dl.ac.uk/CBMT/HOME.html ----- chemweb: A list for Chemical Applications of the Internet. To unsubscribe, send to listserver@ic.ac.uk the following message; unsubscribe chemweb List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (rzepa@ic.ac.uk)
participants (2)
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                Paul May
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                peter Murray-rust