Hi Carlos. fredag 17. september 2004, 00:20, wrote Carlos Pereira: > A week ago I sent the message below to [email protected], > but so far I didn't receive any answer. Lost in the spam?
I remembered, but I must say that I can't quite grasp what this program can do...., so I did not answer your first mail .... Sorry > I am the first author of GAMGI - General Atomistic Modelling Graphic > Interface, available at http://www.gamgi.org, a GPL program to build, view > and analyse atomic strucures, such as molecules, crystals, glasses, > liquids, etc. GAMGI supports the 230 crystallographic space groups, and can > be used for example to perform point symmetry and 3D Voronoi analysis. > GAMGI supports multiple windows, layers, and lights, and offers maximum > control over even low-level objects as atoms, bonds and text objects. > > GAMGI comes with significant XHTML documentation that can be seen with a > browser or GAMGI itself, from the local computer or from a remote http or > ftp site, such as http://www.gamgi.org or ftp://ftp.gamgi.org/gamgi/. GAMGI > also comes with hundreds of files describing relevant molecules, clusters > and cells, in GAMGI XML native format, that can be loaded out-of-the-box. > > GAMGI is written in ANSI C and requires glib 1.2/gtk 1.2, gtkglarea 1.2, > mesa and expat libraries, easily available in all Linux distributions. > There are two mailing lists available, one for help users, other to discuss > development. Andre Truter, a Software Engineer, is building packages for > GAMGI. Currently there are packages for Suse and Debian. Packages for other > systems will be available on request. The debian-edu project is getting quite huge, and we try to include as few custom packages as possible. To even be considered as a potential program for debian-edu, the program must be in debian mainstream. How to get inside debian, I can't tell you, but I'll bet someone else on this list can give you a point in the right direction. There are probably more information over at http://www.debian.org/devel/ -- -Frode To be a kind of moral Unix, he touched the hem of Nature's shift. -- Shelley

