ACS Symposium on "Electronic Notebooks, Collaborative Computing, and
Internets/Intranets in Science"

The 7th International Symposium on "Electronic Notebooks, Collaborative Computing and Internets/Intranets in Science" will be at the ACS Meeting in Las Vegas.

THE DEADLINE IS APPROACHING FAST (APRIL 15TH - One week away!). A few days extension may be possible.

If you are doing interesting things with electronic notebooks, groupware, document management, the world wide web or Intranets, or collaborative computing, or LIMS in R&D and scientific applications that you would like to share with other scientists, information specialists, or other professionals working in lab automation, chemical or bioinformatics, intellectual property protection, or related fields...

PLEASE SUBMIT A PAPER!

GENERAL INFORMATION - About the 214th ACS National Meeting

The 214th ACS national meeting in Las Vegas will be held September 7-11. The program will appear on this site in addition to the June 2 and August 4, 1997 issues of Chemical and Engineering News. Information on the Las Vegas meeting will be posted as it becomes available.

American Chemical Society Meetings Department
1155 Sixteenth Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20036 USA
Phone: (202) 872-4396
Fax: (202) 872-6128

IF YOU WANT TO PRESENT A PAPER AT THE SYMPOSIUM

Download the abstract form either from the ACS website at:

http://www.acs.org/meetings/abstract/absdown.html

See this next ACS Web link if you don't know how to fill out one of these forms.

http://www.acs.org/meetings/abstract/abinfo.html#howto

DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS - April 15.

PLEASE SEND COPIES OF YOUR ABSTRACT AS A FILE ATTACHMENT TO:

Rich Lysakowski at "rich@teamscience.com" [Symposium Chairman]
Charlie Gragg at "cgragg@nc.ndl.net" [ACS CINF Division Chairman]

HISTORY OF THE SYMPOSIUM SERIES

In 1992 Steve Schmidt and Rich Lysakowski committed to host a series of symposia at various international venues to catalyze the creation and acceptance of electronic notebooks and related systems in science. We decided a dozen symposia held over a ten-year period would suffice to "make it happen." We've had six symposia so far and we are most of the way there now.