chem-bla-ics
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  • May 30, 2007

    ChemRank: ranking scientific literature

    Mitch just launched ChemRank, a website where we can comment on and vote thumbs up or down for scientific articles. Good initiative I think. Some thoughts:

    less than 1 minute read
  • May 30, 2007

    Weka Decision Trees to Java Conversion

    Some time ago I wrote a small Perl script to convert a decision tree created with Weka in the ARFF format to Java source code, for use in the ionization potential prediction in CDK. The advantage is that Weka is no longer used are runtime, and that there is no model that needs to be loaded and interpreted. Instead, it is simple Java code that does the work, much faster.

    1 minute read
  • May 29, 2007

    The JCIM is linking to Planet Blue Obelisk??

    I use Google Analytics to analyze the visitors of my blogs and of Planet Blue Obelisk too. Now, for the past couple of weeks, the webpage of the Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling is showing up as refering site:

    less than 1 minute read
  • May 25, 2007

    Numbers are copyrighted?

    I just read on Planet Blue Obelisk Peter’s disturbing news (via Suber) that Wiley thinks it can copyright a set of numbers (also known as data). That is a sad milestone in scientific publishing. It reminds me of the recent internet hype about a long number recently flooding the internet (and notably del.icio.us) related to watching DVDs you legally bought. Some details can be found in this Linux Weekly News article on How Debian packages a number.

    less than 1 minute read
  • May 11, 2007

    Added my hCard to my blog

    Getting back on microformats (see yesterday), I added my hCard to the bottom of my blog:

    less than 1 minute read
  • May 11, 2007

    Microformats in chemistry...

    Peter blogged some days ago about microformats and how they could be used in chemistry. Being late and a bit absent minded, I added a short comment that Chemical blogspace supports microformats for chemistry, and that chemistry is harvested from that, and actually semantically distributed again using CMLRSS.

    2 minute read
  • May 6, 2007

    Preparing a Chemoinformatics workshop

    After handing in a new draft of my PhD manuscript with my co-promotors last friday, and a week before we leave for Sweden, it is time to start finishing up the material for my one hour workshop on chemoinformatics in general and QSAR/QSPR in particular for the Bioclipse Workshop.

    less than 1 minute read
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  • Egon Willighagen
  • 0000-0001-7542-0286

Chemblaics (pronounced chem-bla-ics) is the science that uses open science and computers to solve problems in chemistry, biochemistry and related fields.