Casual Saturdays: Verge

Posted by Rich Apodaca Sat, 19 Jan 2008 15:20:00 GMT

Reference: French, Adams, Anderson, Kitchen, Hughes, and Wood Stem Cells

How Would Your Cheminformatics Tool Do This?

Posted by Rich Apodaca Fri, 18 Jan 2008 14:32:00 GMT

Reference: Ishikawa, Shimasaki, Skashi, and Toyota Organic Letters

Chemistry's Oldies but Goodies - Direct to Your Desktop

Posted by Rich Apodaca Thu, 17 Jan 2008 15:16:00 GMT

Google Books has digitized a large number of older, hard-to-find chemistry journals. Given that the shelf-life of a chemistry experimental is measured in centuries, this may be a useful alternative to the traditional interlibrary loan.

Although the user interface for Google Books should be an embarrassment to a company with Google's resources and reputation, the content is indispensable.

The expiration of copyright for the older chemical literature is an excellent opportunity for those wanting to preserve this vital research and historical resource.

Swing Sightings: Chenomx NMR Suite

Posted by Rich Apodaca Wed, 16 Jan 2008 14:43:00 GMT

Science Blogging Anthology Now in Print 2

Posted by Rich Apodaca Tue, 15 Jan 2008 14:31:00 GMT

The science blogging anthology The Open Laboratory 2007 is now available for purchase. As mentioned earlier, The Open Laboratory was created to promote the 2008 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference to be held on January 19, 2008. Chapter 4.3 contains the article "SMILES and Aromaticity: Broken?", which originally appeared last year on Depth-First. Details are available in the original announcement.

The Open Laboratory's publisher is remarkable. Lulu is a service that lets people of average means publish and sell their own books. The key to the entire operation is that rather than being printed in large batches, books are printed on demand.

Got a great idea for a book that will likely have a devoted but small audience? You too can publish a high-quality product and sell it through an established, worldwide distribution network. No contracts, no agents, no years of trying to find a publisher. Just do it.

Consider these chemistry-related titles currently offered by Lulu, none of which has the mass market needed to get a major publisher to back them:

Having bought one Lulu title recently, Desktop Java Live, I can say that both the experience and finished product are nearly indistinguishable from buying books at Amazon.

Let's hear it for The Long Tail!

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