Hi,
Echoing the suggestion here we floated the idea of a 'molecule of the week' but it didn't get off the ground.
Superb idea! Why don't we all volunteer to find out information about one particular molecule each and put it up as a web page. A central coordinator (Henry?) can then nominate a 'molecule of the week' from the submitted pages. All the UK web sites could then put a pointer to that particular page for that week on their home pages. It might be a way of increasing interest in the Web, and build up a database of molecular information at the same time. To get undergrads interested, I'd suggest the pages weren't too 'heavy', keep them simple, informative and interesting... Anyone agree? Anyone keen to make a molecule of the week page?
The central thing is that there should be an easy way of mounting cgi-scripts and editing them. (Remember that almost all forms require a cgi-script to process them.) A library of cgi tools would be extremely valuable. If anyone has a database engine that can process the results that is extremely valuable (we looked at /rdb - the author gave us some help - but we didn't have enough resource). IF we can get a collection of resources I am sure that otehrs will add to it rather than duplicating it.
Yes, yes, yes! I've been pestering our computer centre for 6 months to provide me with useful cgi programs to do things like make password protected areas, hot images, search engines, page access counters, stats packages, etc, but they still haven't done it. A centralised resource like this, eg on an ftp site, would be invaluable! ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 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)
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                Paul May