Robert,

 I've recently upgraded to MacOS 10.3, and I use Safari nearly
 exclusively.  I was wondering whether there are plans or has been
 progress in creating a Jmol plug-in for the Safari Web browser?

Panther 10.3/Safari works well with the existing JmolApplet.

Hi Miguel,


I'm not talking about an applet, which must be delivered from server to user at the same time as the content (isn't that right?). I'm talking about a plug-in, like PDF Viewer or PDF Browser or Chime, which allows the user to view content that is delivered without an applet.

Specifically, the American Chemical Society now provides MOL files and other online content in the Web versions of their publications, but it does not deliver applets to render the content. (Maybe it should, but it doesn't.) Currently, there are only two ways for Mac users to view this content: (1) use Netscape 4.7 with the Chime or Chem3D plug-in, or (2) save the content to disk and then open the content with a stand-alone app like Jmol or a host of other commercial apps. I would like to have a plug-in for Safari so that when I direct the browser to a MOL file, the plug-in automatically renders it in the Web browser page. I might even be willing to pay a shareware fee for such a plug-in.

-- Bob


------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials Free Linux tutorial presented by Daniel Robbins, President and CEO of GenToo technologies. Learn everything from fundamentals to system administration.http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1470&alloc_id=3638&op=click _______________________________________________ Jmol-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users

Reply via email to