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)>] > [2 <text/html; UTF-8 (quoted-printable)>] > 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. > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe from the XPLOR-NIH list, click the following link: > Bad URL Removed - see why - > https://ees.sps.nih.gov/services/Pages/Anti-Virus.aspx?SUBED1=XPLOR-NIH&A=1 ######################################################################## To unsubscribe from the XPLOR-NIH list, click the following link: http://list.nih.gov/cgi-bin/wa.exe?SUBED1=XPLOR-NIH&A=1
