On Sun, Jul 22, 2012 at 10:13 AM, Rzepa Henry <h.rz...@imperial.ac.uk> wrote:
> I would love to sprinkle  QR codes in lecture notes, and have students 
> acquire the molecule on their mobile device seconds later?

QR codes basically encode a random string. Commonly, URLs, e.g. with
QRate.me for posters such as this one [0]. But they can encode Jmol
scripts too.

Henry, would you like the students to open the QR code with the Jmol
app, and thus encode a Jmol script? Or a webpage? How about the QR
code of Figshare (e.g. your [1], and upload the Jmol script there?

But I like the idea of "opening" a QR code with the Jmol app...

Egon

0.http://qrate.me/entry.php?id=238417
1.http://figshare.com/articles/Gaussian_Job_Archive_for_C6H4N2O3/93097

-- 
Dr E.L. Willighagen
Postdoctoral Researcher
Department of Bioinformatics - BiGCaT
Maastricht University (http://www.bigcat.unimaas.nl/)
Homepage: http://egonw.github.com/
LinkedIn: http://se.linkedin.com/in/egonw
Blog: http://chem-bla-ics.blogspot.com/
PubList: http://www.citeulike.org/user/egonw/tag/papers

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Live Security Virtual Conference
Exclusive live event will cover all the ways today's security and 
threat landscape has changed and how IT managers can respond. Discussions 
will include endpoint security, mobile security and the latest in malware 
threats. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfrnl04242012/114/50122263/
_______________________________________________
Jmol-developers mailing list
Jmol-developers@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-developers

Reply via email to