Thank you Piotr, this is very useful to know.
Cheers,
Eugene
On 24 Apr 2014, at 22:18, Piotr Sliz wrote:
> Eugene,
>
> SBGrid Consortium supports certain paid programs such as Pymol, Schrodinger,
> and Geneious, and academic laboratories have access to a limited pool of
> tokens. For more se
Eugene,
SBGrid Consortium supports certain paid programs such as Pymol, Schrodinger,
and Geneious, and academic laboratories have access to a limited pool of
tokens. For more serious computations it might be easier to get an individual
license, yet for starters the SBGrid shared-token library i
> SBGrid is a also good option if you can afford it. It comes with PyMOL
> licenses.
- it would be helpful if SBGrid people can comment on this. AFAIK, nothing in
SBGrid comes with paid licenses, and SBGrid fees are just for installing and
maintaining the software. Individual program licenses a
Well as s/w improvements don't necessarily happen on a yearly basis, but people
like being paid each year, I think the model is not unreasonable, as long as
the cost is reasonable - which, for instance, the Adobe s/w isn't. As one can
tell from the profit margins of s/w companies. So I do pay
On 4/23/14, 1:53 PM, Francis Reyes wrote:
Office 365 is $10 a month, Adobe Creative Cloud (what used to be their Creative
Suite) is $50 a month with an annual commitment.
Licensing the use of software on a time-limited basis as a business model seems
like it's going to stick around.
And that's
Hi Mirek,
If you happen to be using OS X, Fink makes it very easy to install recent
open-source pymol.
Best regards,
Dmitry
On 2014-04-23, at 11:43 AM, "Cygler, Miroslaw" wrote:
> Hi,
> I have inquired at Schrodinger about the licensing for PyMol. I was surprised
> by their answer. T
On Apr 23, 2014, at 11:43 AM, Cygler, Miroslaw wrote:
> They do not offer the option of purchasing the software and using the
> obtained version without time limitation. This policy is very different from
> many other software packages, which one can use without continuing licensing
> fees and
In addition to what has been mentioned by others, Open-Source PyMOL
installation instructions for various platforms are available on the PyMOL Wiki:
http://pymolwiki.org/index.php/Linux_Install
http://pymolwiki.org/index.php/MAC_Install
http://pymolwiki.org/index.php/Windows_Install
Cheers,
Jare
Hi,
if one is hesitant to compile it it, pymol is easily installed on a
Linux box via "yum" ;
enable EPEL repo ( in Redhat derivatives e.g. fedora, Centos, SciLinux)
"yum install pymol" will install version 1.6 (latest version by
Schrödinger is 1.7)
Best, Guenter
Hi,
I have inquired at Sc
And to stick up for the underdog, try Chimera from UCSF, which also has been
coming along nicely (understatement!): http://www.cgl.ucsf.edu/chimera/
Mark
> On 23 Apr 2014, at 17:48, Jim Fairman wrote:
>
> To the best of my knowledge the source code is still available on
> Sourceforge: http:/
I'd like to add the under-underdog then, Tim Fenn's povscript+
https://sites.google.com/site/timfenn/povscript. Makes really clear and
nice figures and is rather simple to compile. For the most part you do
not even need a mouse to use it ...
Michael
On 23.04.2014 18:21, mark.x.brooks wrote:
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 8:43 AM, Cygler, Miroslaw
wrote:
> I have inquired at Schrodinger about the licensing for PyMol. I was
> surprised by their answer. The access to PyMol is only through a yearly
> licence. They do not offer the option of purchasing the software and using
> the obtained versi
No one is keeping you from downloading the source code and compiling.
It's straightforward and free.
Andreas
On 23/04/2014 4:43, Cygler, Miroslaw wrote:
Hi,
I have inquired at Schrodinger about the licensing for PyMol. I was
surprised by their answer. The access to PyMol is only through a y
Hi
Since this is the CCP4 BB, I'd give ccp4mg a try...
On 23 Apr 2014, at Wed23 Apr 16:43, Cygler, Miroslaw wrote:
Hi,
I have inquired at Schrodinger about the licensing for PyMol. I was
surprised by their answer. The access to PyMol is only through a
yearly licence. They do not offer the
To the best of my knowledge the source code is still available on
Sourceforge: http://sourceforge.net/projects/pymol/
You should be able to compile binaries for the OS of your choice from there.
That being said, CCP4MG has been coming along nicely in recent years - at
this point I'm 50:50 betwee
Hi,
I have inquired at Schrodinger about the licensing for PyMol. I was surprised
by their answer. The access to PyMol is only through a yearly licence. They do
not offer the option of purchasing the software and using the obtained version
without time limitation. This policy is very different f
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