Dear Colleagues,
This paper on the early days of crystallographic computing will be of
relevance:-
http://garfield.library.upenn.edu/classics1980/A1980JR2291.pdf
Greetings,
John
Prof John R Helliwell DSc
On 20 Jan 2013, at 06:38, Edward A. Berry ber...@upstate.edu wrote:
Edward A.
Were there really no computers in 1963?
JPK
On Fri, Jan 18, 2013 at 9:51 AM, David Schuller dj...@cornell.edu wrote:
http://eventheodd.blogspot.in/2013/01/golden-jubilee-of-ramachandran-plot.html
Golden Jubilee of Ramachandran
http://www.computerhistory.org/revolution/timeline
And this paper describes their use of a digital computer as if it were rather
routine:
Sternberg, J., Stillo, H. Schwendeman, R. (1960). Spectrophotometric Analysis of Multicomponent Systems Using the
Least Squares Method in Matrix Form.
Edward A. Berry wrote:
http://www.computerhistory.org/revolution/timeline
And this paper describes their use of a digital computer as if it were rather
routine:
Sternberg, J., Stillo, H. Schwendeman, R. (1960). Spectrophotometric Analysis
of Multicomponent Systems Using the
Least Squares
http://eventheodd.blogspot.in/2013/01/golden-jubilee-of-ramachandran-plot.html
Golden Jubilee of Ramachandran Plot
http://eventheodd.blogspot.in/2013/01/golden-jubilee-of-ramachandran-plot.html
Exactly fifty years from now i.e. in the year 1963, G. N. Ramachandran
et. al published