It also brings Jmol's powerful molecular visualization to the mobile device sandbox. The HTML5 browser rendering of JSmol carries with it almost all of the functionality of the Jmol applet, including Jmol's powerful scripting language. If on the other hand, you are tired of messing with the Java plugin, then JSmol will render in its HTML5 incarnation. JSmol will render as the familiar Jmol applet. If the Java plugin tickles your fancy, that's just fine. In a few short months, Jmol developers led by Bob Hanson have produced JSmol. It simply goes by a different name, JSmol. With the decline of the Java browser plugin (There, I said it!), Jmol is still the gold standard for molecular visualization. For more than a decade, this nuisance was worth the effort because Jmol was the molecular visualization gold standard. Java browser plugins can be a real nuisance for users. As a Jmol Web page application developer, one problem has always bothered me.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |