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Transitions, Macintosh
Jon L. Holmes
University of WisconsinÐMadison, Madison, WI 53715-1116
Note:
This issue is out of print
Transition elements, transition points, transition states, allowed transitions... the study of chemistry frequently (always) involves the causes and effects of transition. Indeed, without transition, chemistry would not exist, or would at the very least be much less interesting. This also applies to life in general and to the Journal of Chemical Education and JCE Software in particular, which, in case you have not noticed are now undergoing a major transition. As we all know, transition can be difficult and stressful, especially transition to a higher energy state, which is what the Journal and JCE Software are trying to accomplish.
One of the transitions that has already taken place is that of editor of the Journal from J. J. Lagowski to John W. Moore and of the editorial offices from Austin, TX, to Madison, WI. To make space for the additional staff, equipment, and paper, the Journal offices were placed near the chemistry building in a house now known as Journal House (see illustration). The editorial staff of JCE Software also moved into Journal House. We hope this consolidation of the Journal and JCE Software staff and operations will serve to better link the two in the minds of our readers. We also hope to reap the benefits of the greater variety of skills that a larger, consolidated staff working in proximity to one another possesses.
As part of the transition of editorship, a reorganization of the editorial staff has also been implemented. As all of the Journal staff are new, this reorganization was essentially confined to the JCE Software staff. One of the results of this reorganization is that as editor of JCE Software I am now writing this editorial (please bear with me). Elizabeth MooreÕs duties have been redefined to address the concerns of the Journal readership. Nancy Gettys continues to handle the software submissions and she now also does the page layout of the documentation. Distribution of JCE Software materials is still ably managed by Lin Morris and her team of student helpers. In addition to software customer support, Lin and her team now handle Journal queries as well via our toll-free 800 number. And to help in troubleshooting software problems both before and after publication, Eric Kolstad is our resident MS-DOS and Windows expert. Should you care to contact any one of us individually, I have listed our e-mail addresses below.
The transition of editorship is not the only transition taking place that will impact upon JCE Software. The software industry is rapidly making a transition to the Internet and the World Wide Web (WWW). The education community has also embraced the Internet. JCE Software has had a presence on the Internet for three years and we are planning to greatly expand that presence with additional offerings. Featured among these offerings is a new JCE publication, JCE Internet, offering Web-based software in the form of HTML (Hyper Text Markup Language, the language of the WWW) documents, VRML (Virtual Reality Modeling Language) documents, Java applets (small applications written in the Java programming language and usually embedded in an HTML document and viewed with a Java-aware browser such as Netscape Navigator 3.0 or later), and any other current or as yet unforeseen applications of the WWW to chemistry education. I urge authors of such documents or programs to submit them to JCE Software or JCE Internet for possible publication. As you, both developers and users, make the transition to Internet-based instructional materials, we would like you to continue to look to JCE Software and JCE Internet as an outlet for your development efforts and as a source for computer-based instructional materials.
I have always viewed the Macintosh as the leading-edge microcomputing platform. It was the Macintosh that led the way to graphical user interfaces, desktop publishing, network connectivity, and multimedia. Currently the leading edge is dulling, but as evidenced by Schroedinger.m and Symmetry Elements and Operations our Macintosh authors continue to provide both sophisticated computational tools and visually appealing instructional software. JCE Software has just recently received its first WWW server software submission (a quiz generation and administration tool). It is hosted by a Macintosh. I hope that this is the first of many WWW-based materials to be submitted. If you or your colleagues are working on such projects, please consider submitting them to JCE Software. And remember, as stated in our Guide for Submissions (p. 41), we are willing to provide help in bringing works-in-progress to publication. Together we can help to bring the promise of the Internet to the chemistry education community.
As we enter this coming year of transition, we are looking at and evaluating all aspects of JCE publications. We greatly value your input. During this transitional period I would urge you as users and/or prospective authors of JCE Software to contact us with your suggestions as to how we might make this publication more useful to you. Do you have an idea for a computer program that you think would aid the chemistry education community? Are there ways in which we could improve the documentation that accompanies our software? How do you feel about electronic distribution of JCE Software materials? Have you visited our home page on the WWW? If so, how might it be improved? Do you have suggestions for the types of columns, articles, or resources that you would like to see become a part of JCE Internet? If so, please let us know.
JCE Software jcesoft@chem.wisc.edu Jon L. Holmes jlholmes@chem.wisc.edu Elizabeth A. Moore betmoore@chem.wisc.edu Nancy S. Gettys gettys@chem.wisc.edu Lin S. Morris lwmorris@facstaff.wisc.edu Eric Kolstad kolstad@chem.wisc.edu First Published: October 1996
Citation: Holmes, J. L. Transitions, Macintosh J. Chem. Educ. Software 8C2
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Last Updated: April 26, 2001
Created: March 4, 1997Created by: S. B. Mathews
Comments to: jceonline@chem.wisc.edu
© 1997 Division of Chemical Education, Inc., American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.