Product DemonstrationsLife Sciences

Draw Chemical Structures on Your Mobile

17 Dec 2009
Draw Chemical Structures on Your Mobile

Learn how to use a chemical structure drawing application for the iPhone and iPod touch – ChemJuice. This new application allows users to draw, author, examine, save and email chemical structures from any location.

About the company

IDBS logo

IDBS

IDBS is a leading provider of advanced software solutions for the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and agrochemical industries. IDBS' applications, such as ActivityBase are integrated data management, analysis and decision-making products used by scientists in the drug discovery industry to acquire, manage and use chemical and biological data across a spectrum of discovery activities. IDBS' products are the chosen solutions for scientists at more than 150 leading discovery research companies.

Using IDBS' applications, scientists can easily access, visualise and analyse information throughout an entire organisation, thereby allowing chemists and biologists to communicate and process information faster and more accurately. IDBS' products create value by integrating many data sources, including chemistry, HTS, secondary screening, profiling, DMPK, early ADME, behavioral and other pharmacology-based assays. Without extensive customisation or consultation, IDBS' applications solve information management challenges that impede the life sciences industry. In fact, IDBS offers the only scalable data management solution that can increase an organisation's productivity within weeks, as compared to tool-based systems, which may involve significant customisation and can take months to be operational.

2.9/5.0
|6 Reviews

ChemJuice

IDBS

Structure drawing app for the iPhone and iPod touch. Draw chemical structures Add notes to your structures Email your structure as a mol file Peruse over 100 interesting molecules Calculate molecular weight, formula and element % composition Convert grams to moles and vice versa Interactive periodic table with video links to University of Nottingham's Periodic Table of Videos.

(0)

Other videos from IDBS

Links