Skip to main content

Home/ OpenSciInfo/ Group items tagged documentation

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Mike Chelen

SourceForge.net: Open Computer Vision Library - 0 views

  •  
    The Open Computer Vision Library has > 500 algorithms, documentation and sample code for real time computer vision. Tutorial documentation is in O'Reilly Book: Learning OpenCV http://www.amazon.com/Learning-OpenCV-Computer-Vision-Library/dp/0596516134
Mike Chelen

Qualifying Online Information Resources for Chemists | SciVee - 0 views

shared by Mike Chelen on 11 Dec 08 - Cached
  •  
    his meeting was about "Making the Web Work for Science and the Impact of e-Science and the Cyberinfrastructure." I provided an overview of how access to information has changed over the past 20 years for me. I talked about the challenges for publishers serving the chemistry community and how their business models are being challenged and how I empathize with the struggle to figure out how to deal with it. I talked about quality and how care must be taken when using information online. We are ALL challenged with errors - whether you consider PubChem, ChemSpider, Wikipedia or any of the other online databases they all have errors - how do you find them? Some of them are obvious and I pointed to obvious examples in the talk. I hoped to educate the attendees in regards to the value of InChI which, while not a perfect fit yet, is a great start to structure-based communication of chemistry. I publicly blessed the efforts of publishers such as the RSC and Nature Publishing group for the efforts they are making to support InChI and improve the quality of document presentation online. I blessed CAS as a treasure trove of information and the gold standard of curated chemistry. We need them all to be successful for the sake of our science. The challenge is how to fit into the ongoing proliferation of free access to information without modifying the business models.
Mike Chelen

UCSF Chimera Home Page - 0 views

shared by Mike Chelen on 11 Dec 08 - Cached
  •  
    UCSF Chimera is a highly extensible program for interactive visualization and analysis of molecular structures and related data, including density maps, supramolecular assemblies, sequence alignments, docking results, trajectories, and conformational ensembles. High-quality images and animations can be generated. Chimera includes complete documentation and several tutorials, and can be downloaded free of charge for academic, government, non-profit, and personal use. Chimera is developed by the Resource for Biocomputing, Visualization, and Informatics and funded by the NIH National Center for Research Resources (grant P41-RR01081).
Mike Chelen

PircBot - Java IRC Bot Framework (Java IRC API for Bots) - 0 views

  •  
    PircBot is a Java framework for writing IRC bots quickly and easily. Its features include an event-driven architecture to handle common IRC events, flood protection, DCC resuming support, ident support, and more. Its comprehensive logfile format is suitable for use with pisg to generate channel statistics. Full documentation is included, and this page contains a 5-minute step-by-step guide to making your first IRC bot. PircBot allows you to perform a variety of fun tasks on IRC, but it is also used for more serious applications by the US Navy, the US Air Force, the CIA (unconfirmed), several national defence agencies, and inside the Azureus bittorrent client. But don't let that put you off - it's still easy to use!
Mike Chelen

How to set up Disco on Amazon EC2 - Disco v0.1.2 documentation - 0 views

  •  
    With the following three steps, you can set up a Disco cluster in the Amazon's Elastic Computing Cloud. This will cost you a few dollars (or more, depending on your needs) but requires no resources on your side besides a single machine that you use to setup the cluster. In this setup Disco master and nodes run on EC2. Your Disco client can run either on the master node on EC2 or on a local machine.
Mike Chelen

The Control Fallacy: Why OA Out-Innovates the Alternative : Nature Precedings - 0 views

  •  
    This article examines the relationship between Open Access to the scholarly literature and innovation. It traces the ideas of "end to end" network principles in the Internet and the World Wide Web and applies them to the scholarly biomedical literature. And the article argues for the importance of relieving not just price barriers but permission barriers.
1 - 15 of 15
Showing 20 items per page