Proteopedia:Hot News
From Proteopedia
As of Sunday, Jan 26 2014, Proteopedia displays interactive molecules in JSmol, without Java. Molecular scenes ("green links") can also be created and edited without Java. This enables Proteopedia to work on iPads, iOS and mobile devices where Java is not available, and on any device where Java is not installed. However, rotation is slower without Java, especially for large molecules (for example, the Ribosome). If your device has Java installed and working, you can achieve faster, smoother rotation by using Java: see using Java for rendering structures.
The line describing JmolExtension on page http://proteopedia.org/w/Special:Version contains an updated report on the running Jmol version, in the format (now loaded Jmol version .....)
Proteopedia exceeded 2,500 registered users from 54 countries this week. In decreasing order, the 20 most represented countries are United States, Israel, Canada, France, United Kingdom, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Australia, Austria, Denmark, Portugal, China, Finland, Chile, Brazil, Netherlands, Spain and Sweden.
Proteopedia currently contains over 3400 user-created articles, and over 93,000 automatically created pages corresponding to each of the structures released by the PDB.
There are ~26,000 human visits and 59,000 bots visits weekly. The leading countries in accessing Proteopedia are the United States, Japan, Spain and China.
The most accessed pages, apart from the Main Page, are Hemoglobin, Avian_Influenza_Neuraminidase,_Tamiflu_and_Relenza, Ribosome, Acetylcholinesterase, HIV-1_protease, Green_Fluorescent_Protein, Ramachandran_Plot, 1iyt, Triose_Phosphate_Isomerase, and Lac_repressor
Poster Prize Awarded at the 7th-ICSG Conference, Sapporo, Japan
Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)
Eric Martz, Jaime Prilusky, David Canner, Joel L. Sussman, Eran Hodis, Wayne Decatur
