Molecule Editor in Java
Dear all, I have just finished writing a molecule editor in JAVA. If anyone is interested, it is available at : http://www.chem.leeds.ac.uk/ICAMS/people/denis/moledit.html You may freely download the Java source code and modify it. Any comments are indeed welcome. Thank you Denis --------------------------------------------------------------------- Denis M. Bayada e-mail: denis@mi.leeds.ac.uk ICAMS voice: (44) (0)113 233 65 95 School of Chemistry fax: (44) (0)113 233 65 63 University of Leeds http://www.chem.leeds.ac.uk/ICAMS/people/denis Leeds LS2 9JT ENGLAND ... but as I proceeded in my labour, it became every day more horrible and irksome to me. Sometimes I could not prevail on myself to enter my laboratory for several days, and at other times I toiled day and night in order to complete my work. It was, indeed, a filthy process in which I was engaged. Frankenstein (Mary Shelley) --------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- chemweb: A list for Chemical Applications of the Internet. Archived as: http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/hypermail/chemweb/ To unsubscribe, send to listserver@ic.ac.uk the following message; unsubscribe chemweb List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (rzepa@ic.ac.uk)
Dear colleagues You may or may not find this helpful when considering designing your chemistry site. The following are results from 100000 accesses on 1 page of WebElements over the last 20 days or so. They were achieved using the free www.hitbox.com service. No doubt there all sorts of systematic errors so don't take the numbers too literally. Browsers Netscape 52% Internet Explorer 47% Others 1% (mainly WebTV) Versions 5.x 1% 4.x 70% 3.x 27% JavaScript enabled: 96% Java enabled: Yes 80% No 6% Unknown 15% OS Windows 83% (95 53%; 98 18%; NT 9%; 3.x 4%) MacOS 14% Unix 1% WebTV 1% Other 1 % Screens 800 x 600 45% 640 x 480 29% bigger 25% Plug-ins (as % of accesses) QuickTime 39% LiveAudio 38% ShockWave graphics player 38% NPAVI32DynamicLinkLibrary 27% (what is this?) ShockwaveFlash 23% Real (various) 15% AdobeAcrobat 12% CosmoPlayer 10% Live3D 5% PDF viewer 3% Chime 2% [plenty of others, mostly 0-3%] I'm curious about what the plug-in figures, in particular, really mean, bearing in mind this is a chemistry specific page that is being monitored. They do seem to suggest that if you have a controlled audience (that is, a group of your students, say), then assuming specific plug-in availabilty might be OK - but if your audience is general, then assume very little ! Dr Mark J Winter (Director of Studies) Department of Chemistry, The University, Sheffield S3 7HF, England tel: +44 (0)114 222 9304 fax: +44 (0)114 222 9303 e-m: mark.winter@sheffield.ac.uk http://www.shef.ac.uk/chemistry/staff/mjw/mark-winter.html WebElements is the periodic table on the world-wide web: http://www.shef.ac.uk/chemistry/web-elements/ The Sheffield Chemdex is a listing of chemistry sites on the world-wide web: http://www.shef.ac.uk/chemistry/chemdex/ chemweb: A list for Chemical Applications of the Internet. To post to list: mailto:chemweb@ic.ac.uk Archived as: http://www.lists.ic.ac.uk/hypermail/chemweb/ To (un)subscribe, mailto:majordomo@ic.ac.uk the following message; (un)subscribe chemweb List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (mailto:rzepa@ic.ac.uk)
participants (2)
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                Denis M. Bayada
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                Mark Winter