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Chemblaics (pronounced chem-bla-ics) is the science that uses open science and computers to solve problems in chemistry, biochemistry and related fields.
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The Eclipse Rich Client Platform (RCP) is very powerfull, and takes a lot of architectural things of your hand when developing a bio- and chemoinformatics GUIs. Bioclipse is based on it. One thing the RCP offers is a Help View which works with plain (X)HTML files, and one neat feature is the context help. It is help shown in the Help View when one focused on a specific GUI element.

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Here are some quick download statistics for some of the chemblaics components. First Jmol. The new stable Jmol 10.2 was release just over a week ago, and this obviously boosted downloads, breaking the monthly download total of two earlier this year (source): Statistics for the CDK include download numbers for the CDK library itself, but for JChemPaint, the CDK News, and several other packages too. Totals are at about 1/3rd of Jmol.

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I have not blogged for about a week now, and been too busy with other things, like finishing my PhD articles/manuscript, my new job at the CUBIC where I continued the work on proper protein support in Bioclipse using the CDK and Jmol: The latter involves getting the CdkJmolAdapter , the interface between the CDK and Jmol, updated for changes since the Jmol as 3D viewer for CDK article in CDK News , the open

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Bioclipse 1.0 is to be released in May, and the cartoon on script command is still not working in the Jmol viewer. For those who do not know yet, Bioclipse is a cool Eclipse RCP based Java chemo-and bioinformatics workbench. To have a better idea what goes on inside Bioclipse, I wrote a new BioPolymer tree to show me the strands in the protein.

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Internet has the nice feature of bringing together people. This has helped many open source projects in the past. But it is also a convenient and cheap way to have conferences. Next month, the ChemConf 2006 conference will be held, and interested people only need to subscribe to a mailing list to participate. The topic of this years ChemConf is Web-Based Applications for Chemical Education.