Dear colleagues, 1) I think Ajees et al. should make available the raw diffraction images of the structure in paper that has caused so much literary commotion, unless they haven't already done so. Perhaps simply put them in an open ftp server?
As I imagine, unless I have missed something, these diffraction images were obtained with grant money, so they should be available to the community. Isn't it? This would allow other scientists to evaluate them as much as they wanted and publish many more papers about the validity or falsehood of the conclusions drawn in the original and (now) infamous Ajees et al. paper. That's how Science -in my opinion- ought to be. 2) I agree that depositing raw images in the PDB or elsewhere would be a great thing for everybody - I usually and happily deposit all the structure factors that I've used to obtain and refine a structure -. However, raw images are becoming larger and larger with the newer and fancier detectors and this trend might not stabilize in quite a while. Although disk space is becoming as well cheaper as time goes by, I think the ratio between these two factors is still unpractical for huge storage purposes. Unless a major development in data storage is accomplished. As an anecdote: during a trip to a synchrotron in the American Midwest, a single dataset (1 degree x 360) was something like 27GB of raw images!!! We managed to collect 1.5 TB of data in about 2 days (having to run -of course always in a hurry- to the nearest computer store to get a few more external hard-drives to backup and take with us all our data). Albeit of being a great option for many of us, I insist. I cannot imagine the burden that storing so much data would be for the PDB or any public database. Not only for taking care of the amount of disk space or storage support required, but as people have mentioned here taking care of them ("curating" them, since disks do crash, as we know, and optical media get irremediably scratched) would be a tremendous and likely expensive endeavor. 3) Perhaps, we should responsibly store the data ourselves, nicely stored in media that "should" allow us to retrieve it after many years (quite a task by itself already; forget the clay tablets though). As probably many of us have done for quite some time. And when asked, send the data to anyone who is interested. But... don't they have already problems accessing the tapes from the first lunar landing? 4) In any case, we should not forget the subject of storing and accessibility of the crystallographic raw images in a public database. Perhaps more journals should accept open letters about this subject, which is important as well as complicated, and create a much larger discussion than this one. All the best, Jordi __ Jordi Benach, PhD MX Beamline Scientist ALBA Synchrotron Light Facility Edifici Ciències. Mòdul C-3 Central Campus Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, SPAIN Phone: +34 93 592 4333 FAX: +34 93 592 4302 E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] __________________________________