Archive for August 30th, 2010

Recently I co-authored a publication with Harry Pence for the Journal of Chemical Education. And today the news that it is published online. Please follow the instructions below if you want to be one of the first 50 people to obtain a copy.

“Your article, ChemSpider: An Online Chemical Information Resource, is now available on the Journal of Chemical Education website.  To view your article, please click on the ACS Articles on Request link below:

http://pubs.acs.org/articlesonrequest/AOR-gUuatr3ABq9RiePFMyaK

As part of the ACS Articles on Request e-prints service,  ACS authors may choose to e-mail or post this link on their website to distribute up to 50 free e-prints of their final published article to interested colleagues during the first 12 months of publication. After that 12 month period any author’s article may be accessed without restriction via the same author-directed link that appears above.  The link directs readers to the Full Text version of the article on the ACS Publications website.

Please note: To access the Articles on Request link, please log in to the Publications website using your ACS ID.  If you do not have an ACS ID, you will need to Register for one for free by clicking on “Register” near the top right corner of the website.”

The first circular for the 16th RSC-SCI Medicinal Chemistry Symposium, 11-14 September 2011, Churchill College, Cambridge, UK is now available here.

The Scientifc Program includes:-

Strategies to success – H-PGDS inhibitors for the treatment of inflamatory disorders, Sukanthini Thurauratnam, Sanofi -Aventis

Discovery on next generation glucokinase activators, Mike Waring, AstraZeneca
Inhalation by design, Paul Glosson, Pfizer

Bromodomains a new class of epigenetic targets for small molecule drug discovery, Jason Witherington, GSK

GPCR Structure based drug design using stabilised receptors(StaRs), Miles Congreve, Heptares
GS-9350: a novel pharmacoenhancer, Lianhong Xu, Gilead Sciences

Earlier this month I reported on the integration of Infotherm to ChemSpider but at that time it would have been necessary for non-RSC members to pay for the data on Infotherm despite the fact that a search would have provided the links and you could have clicked through to the Infotherm data pages. Some good news from Fiz-Chemie though…they are waiving the fee for data on pure compounds accessed from ChemSpider and as a result giving access to over 200,000 tables of data. This is a great contribution to the community of ChemSpider users. Thanks Fiz-Chemie!

 

infotherm