(Chemical) Metadata, browsers and Science
One of the intriguing aspects of the (chemical) Internet is its interaction with the computer (operating systems) used to access it. I have long considered this coupling to be far weaker than it should be. So it was with interest that I noted some announcements by Apple Computer and their forthcoming next version OS (which also presages the Windows "Longhorn"). The two aspects that caught my eye are at http://www.apple.com/macosx/tiger/searchtechnology.html which is a) adding rich metadata to the basic file system to make finding files easier and b) coupling RSS into its browser (and hence possibly the underlying OS itself). The thought struck me that this has the potential for solving one problem which seems to have struck like a pernicious virus these last few years, and which I have noted on this forum previously, namely a profusion of "shrink wrapped" scientific content in the form of PDF (Acrobat) files increasingly littering our computers, about which the only thing we know for certain is the often inscrutable file name (we dont even really know if any given file contains "chemistry"). The theory is that e.g. RSS would deliver the metadata, including bibliographic information (using eg PRISM-RSS), chemical information (CMLRSS), Math information (MathML-RSS) etc, and that any "shrink wrapped" PDF file would be associated with this information by the OS. Thereafter, a "search" on one's computer would immediately reveal this associated information, and one could then find eg "all Acrobat files authored by A on chemical topic B written in 2004 and containing a chemcal substructure C. Well, that is a bit off, but it would mean that one's computer could finally become a proper scientific instrument, rather than a depository of confusion as it often is nowadays. A pipe dream perhaps! If anyone else has any other ideas on how to couple science with the instrument almost invariably now used to retrieve it, do let this forum know. -- Henry Rzepa. Imperial College, Chemistry Dept. +44 0778 626 8220 +44 020 7594 5804 (Fax)
Hello Could someone recommend me a RSS newsreader please ? I am literally standing in front of so many choices: Google (http://tinyurl.com/6zru7) and don't know which one to choose. Could someone also share his/her news links to feed the reader ? http://pubs.acs.org/cen/nanofocus/about/feed.html Thank you in advance for any comment. Best regards Michael
Hello Could someone recommend me a RSS newsreader please ?
I am literally standing in front of so many choices: Google (http://tinyurl.com/6zru7) and don't know which one to choose.
Could someone also share his/her news links to feed the reader ? http://pubs.acs.org/cen/nanofocus/about/feed.html
On the Mac (OS X) the best I contend is NetNewswire (http://ranchero.com/netnewswire/) against which others can be evaluated. Perhaps the most important (and least well supported) feature is the ability to sort feeds by metadata such as Date, Creator, Subject, title. Many newsreaders do not do this. Also worth looking to see whether the software archives old feeds (rather than loosing them as they expire) and whether you can search against feeds (both new and archived). Much of the current software comes from small developers. Of interest is that Microsoft and Apple now appear to be building this technology into the operating system itself. This may of course be both good and bad. Bad, because its tempting to conclude that eg Microsoft will build in proprietary conventions which can only be used from their proprietary operating systems (as happened with Web browsers), good because the development of this technology (in reality still in its infancy) will hopefully continue. And lets not forget the "chemical" version of RSS, details of which can be found at http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/rzepa/cmlrss_distrib/ -- Henry Rzepa. +44 (020) 7594 5774 (Voice); +44 (0870) 132 3747 (eFax) http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/rzepa/ Dept. Chemistry, Imperial College London, SW7 2AZ, UK. (Voracious anti-spam filter in operation for received email. If expected reply not received, please phone/fax).
participants (2)
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                Michael Engel
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                Rzepa, Henry