Thanks for the response Miguel... > It isn't clear to me what you are trying to do.
I have Chime currently installed and it works fine in Netscape. Currently neither Explorer or Mozilla handle .pdb files. I want to be able to install Jmol without corrupting the interaction between Netscape and Chime. I'm the person behind the curtain [EMAIL PROTECTED] project and I'd like to be able to compare Chime and Jmol (and perhaps RASMOL) side-by-side on the same nanoparts without having to constantly change mime types or other configuration parameters. > Are you saying that you would *rather* use Chime than Jmol? > Why on earth would you want to do such a thing?! > Heaven forbid! > ;-) Yes, probably so :-) > The <applet> tag that is used by Jmol is not the same as the mime-types > that are used by plug-ins. That is why you would need to send back > different web pages from the server. Ok, I'm slightly confused -- *what* server? (.pdb files are PDB format anywhere aren't they?) > The applet doesn't use any mime-types. So no configuration of the > web-server is necessary. It simple loads the file that is specified in the > <param> tag. It is my understanding that Jmol is in Java and should therefore work from any browser that supports Java. Do I just open the .pdb file from within Jmol once it is running? (In which case I should be ok if I simply start Jmol and open the file -- or is there some kind of "wrapper" I have to build that points to the PDB file that gets produced by the server?) Thanks, Robert ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email sponsored by: Enterprise Linux Forum Conference & Expo The Event For Linux Datacenter Solutions & Strategies in The Enterprise Linux in the Boardroom; in the Front Office; & in the Server Room http://www.enterpriselinuxforum.com _______________________________________________ Jmol-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users

