From owner-chemistry@ccl.net Wed Nov 17 08:36:00 2010 From: "Alex Allardyce aa+*+chemaxon.com" To: CCL Subject: CCL: chemicalize.org free service: search added, moves to beta Message-Id: <-43175-101117065439-12693-2Hv3/C18EXt/SK4uSNeBIQ()server.ccl.net> X-Original-From: Alex Allardyce Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="------------090907090403010100020206" Date: Wed, 17 Nov 2010 12:54:31 +0100 MIME-Version: 1.0 Sent to CCL by: Alex Allardyce [aa ~ chemaxon.com] This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------090907090403010100020206 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Excuse cross postings: Just to let you all know that we have added chemical search to the chemicalize.org site. The search let's you draw, upload a structure or name a molecule as input and perform various structure searches (substructure, exact match and similarity) against the structures identified from web pages already 'chemicalized' by users and see the resulting structures (with the query highlighted in the result). From each result structure you can go on to see a list of web pages where the target structure was included. An elegance is that you can also see other structures on the listed pages and select popular or diverse selection, to understand if the page is chemically relevant before you visit the link. Feedback from test users was very positive especially because they can chemically search 'a significant proportion' of Wikipedia. Other features added include: Auto-complete, structure images for all auto-complete names and roll over large versions of structure images. The name to structure parser is also improved to increase conversion rate and remove error. For more information see this demo video at the site (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sF8s44Ha79Y) or this presentation (https://www.chemaxon.com/library/ugm-presentations/2010-usugm/naming-and-chemicalize-org/) of chemicalize.org and the underlying technologies used from our recent US UGM. Hope this is useful -- *Alex Allardyce* Marketing Dir. *ChemAxon**Ltd*. Maramaros koz 3/A, Budapest, 1037 Hungary http://www.chemaxon.com Tel: +361 453 0435 Fax: +361 4532659 mailto:aa:-:chemaxon.com --------------090907090403010100020206 Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Excuse cross postings:

Just to let you all know that we have added chemical search to the chemicalize.org site.

The search let's you draw, upload a structure or name a molecule as input and perform various structure searches (substructure, exact match and similarity) against the structures identified from web pages already 'chemicalized' by users and see the resulting structures (with the query highlighted in the result).

From each result structure you can go on to see a list of web pages where the target structure was included. An elegance is that you can also see other structures on the listed pages and select popular or diverse selection, to understand if the page is chemically relevant before you visit the link. Feedback from test users was very positive especially because they can chemically search 'a significant proportion' of Wikipedia.

Other features added include: Auto-complete, structure images for all auto-complete names and roll over large versions of structure images. The name to structure parser is also improved to increase conversion rate and remove error.

For more information see this demo video at the site (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sF8s44Ha79Y) or this presentation (https://www.chemaxon.com/library/ugm-presentations/2010-usugm/naming-and-chemicalize-org/) of chemicalize.org and the underlying technologies used from our recent US UGM.

Hope this is useful
--
Alex Allardyce
Marketing Dir.
ChemAxon Ltd.
Maramaros koz 3/A, Budapest, 1037 Hungary
http://www.chemaxon.com
Tel: +361 453 0435
Fax: +361 4532659

mailto:aa:-:chemaxon.com
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