Hi all,
See announcement at the bottom of this email - for anyone who doesn't
know the PDBe pages or found them useful but difficult to navigate.
Also note that the NMR pages were redesigned as part of this make-over:
http://www.ebi.ac.uk/pdbe/nmr/
Finally, for those of you nearing the end of a contract, there is an
NMR scientific programming job available at the PDBe to work with
Aleks Gutmanas (who will take over from me starting October):
http://www.embl.de/aboutus/jobs/jobs_embl_ebi_hinxton/2010/systems/w_10_044_ebi/index.html
Enjoy,
Wim
PDBe launches its redesigned website (pdbe.org)
-----------------------------------------------
The Protein Data Bank in Europe (PDBe; http://pdbe.org) has launched its
redesigned website with lots of new features, enhancements and
improvements.
This so-called "Midsummer Make-over" is the first in a series of
biannual
upgrades timed to take place around midsummer and midwinter. New
features in
this first make-over include:
- A completely redesigned website with:
+ A tools menu (on the left) that provides access to PDBe services
+ A central panel that allows users to do the most common tasks
straight
from the front page (find various kinds of information about a PDB
entry,
search by a database identifier, or do a sequence search of the PDB)
+ A simple search of *both* PDB and EMDB from the top bar (try a
search for
"Saibil" or "Groel" or "ribosome" to get hits in both databases)
+ Links to go to (quasi-)randomly picked PDB entries (great for
teaching and
demos), accessible from the central panel
- Loads of easy-to-remember shortcuts using the pdbe.org domain name,
e.g.
typing http://pdbe.org in the address bar of your web browser takes you
straight to the new site, http://pdbe.org/1cbs goes directly to the
summary
page for entry 1CBS, and many more
- A wizard (http://pdbe.org/wizard) to guide novice and non-expert
users to
the information, resource or service they are looking for
- A browser that allows exploration and analysis of the structural
archive
based on biological classifications (implemented to date: EC =
http://pdbe.org/ec; Pfam = http://pdbe.org/pfam ; and CATH =
http://pdbe.org/cath ; the browser can also be used to explore the
results of
sequence-similarity searches: http://pdbe.org/fasta)
- PDBprints (c) - a pictorial way of providing at-a-glance information
about
PDB entries - these are used on PDBe summary pages and when displaying
the
results of an advanced search of the PDB (try:
http://pdbe.org/advancedsearch?text=homeobox ). You can also very easily
include them in your own web pages. For more information, see
http://pdbe.org/pdbprints
- Summaries in English for all PDB entries. By default, the first page
of each
PDB entry now contains a user-friendly description of the contents of
the
entry and how the structure was determined (in English sentences) and
some
useful links and images - try http://pdbe.org/1fss or any of your own
favourite structures (or http://pdbe.org/random for a randomly picked
entry)
In addition, there are countless minor tweaks, changes and improvements.
The Protein Data Bank in Europe hopes you will find the new website and
features useful and looks forward to your comments and suggestions
(using the
'Feedback' form which you will find at the top of each page).
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