Proteopedia:About

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==Creators of Proteopedia==
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Proteopedia was created in 2007, and is maintained, by
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[http://www.weizmann.ac.il/home/joel/group/joel.html Joel Sussman] ([[Jls043]]),
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Eran Hodis ([[EH]]),
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and [http://bip.weizmann.ac.il/staff/jaime_prilusky.html Jaime Prilusky] ([[J_Prilusky]] or [[OCA]]).
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==Contents of Proteopedia==
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Currently, Proteopedia has {{NUMBEROFARTICLES}} articles (pages), and {{NUMBEROFUSERS}} [[Special:Listusers | registered users]]. Proteopedia contains one page (or article) for every entry in the [http://www.wwpdb.org World Wide Protein Data Bank]. Proteopedia is updated weekly with new entries shortly after they are released by the Protein Data Bank. Most of these pages, which are titled with a four-character PDB identification code, are "seeded" automatically to include a default view of the asymmetric unit and the abstract of the publication. When you go to a random page, you nearly always get one of these automatically-seeded, PDB-code-titled pages (click Random Page in the ''navigation'' box at the upper left).
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In addition to one article about each entry in the Protein Data Bank (PDB identification code-titled articles), there are articles about molecules or subjects.

Revision as of 23:12, 2 March 2008

Creators of Proteopedia

Proteopedia was created in 2007, and is maintained, by Joel Sussman (Jls043), Eran Hodis (EH), and Jaime Prilusky (J_Prilusky or OCA).

Contents of Proteopedia

Currently, Proteopedia has 271,490 articles (pages), and 5,915 registered users. Proteopedia contains one page (or article) for every entry in the World Wide Protein Data Bank. Proteopedia is updated weekly with new entries shortly after they are released by the Protein Data Bank. Most of these pages, which are titled with a four-character PDB identification code, are "seeded" automatically to include a default view of the asymmetric unit and the abstract of the publication. When you go to a random page, you nearly always get one of these automatically-seeded, PDB-code-titled pages (click Random Page in the navigation box at the upper left).

In addition to one article about each entry in the Protein Data Bank (PDB identification code-titled articles), there are articles about molecules or subjects.

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