Hello Stephen--

  I have passed your request on to the NIH tech transfer people who
are "working" on developing a solution for the issue of commercial use
of Xplor-NIH. Whatever they are doing is not very fast, so I have
another suggestion: the company which holds commercial rights to the
only closely held portion of the code (the old XPLOR interface) is
Biovia/Dassault, and apparently it is possible to buy a CNS license
from them, which should give you rights to use the portion of
Xplor-NIH to which they hold rights. I have been told that the proper
contacts for this purpose are:

  WALSH Cyril [email protected]
  CARROLL Jason [email protected]
  Kevin.MANNING [email protected]

I hope you have some success on this route, and I would appreciate any
feedback which you can share.

best regards--
Charles
    

> 
> [1  <text/plain; UTF-8 (7bit)>]
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> To whom it may concern: 
> 
> I am an industry scientist looking to use XPLOR-NIH for one of my projects.
> What is the path for obtaining permission or a license to use XPLOR-NIH in an
> industry setting? The last information I found was from two and a half years
> ago (see 
> Thank you, 
> Stephen
> 
> -------
> Stephen E. White, PhD
> 
> Senior Scientist, NMR Biophysicist, Biology
> 
> Ten63 Therapeutics
> 
> www.ten63tx.com
> 
> Office: 984-369-5644
> 
> No patient should have to hear they are out of options.
> 
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