| August 23, 1998,
Boston, MA Hypercube, Inc. announced at the National Meeting of the
American Chemical Society that it would be developing chemical software products for the
new generation of handheld and palm-sized PCs that run Windows CE. A prototype of the
first product, PalmChem, running on the Hewlett-Packard 620LX Palmtop PC was shown off on
the floor of the show to interested and even excited attendees. With PalmChem and a
computer that would fit in their pocket, attendees were able for the first time to render
and visualize molecules up to and including biological molecules with a Windows CE
application. The HP620LX was even able to perform quantum mechanical calculations of
molecular orbitals. I intend to be the first person in the world to perform ab
initio calculations in my pocket, joked Dr. Neil S. Ostlund, the CEO and
President of Hypercube, Inc., referring to elaborate and time-consuming molecular
calculations that are normally done on supercomputers. Hypercube, Inc. indicated that
PalmChem was not yet in beta testing form and that the specs for the final product were
still under development. We are showing off some new technology and indicating a
direction to our customers, stated Millard Pate, Hypercubes Director of Sales,
rather than describing a specific product. We will probably be making announcements
on specific products before the end of the year.
The CE version of Windows is a specific version of
Microsoft Windows for Auto PCs, Palm-sized PCs and Handheld PCs. The HP 620LX is a variant
of the handheld platform defined by Microsoft having a keyboard and a 256 color display.
There is still very little application software for these platforms but Hypercube, Inc.
indicated it thought these machines had a great future and that all students of chemistry
might eventually want one of these devices to carry with them to class, to the lab, etc.
The company indicated its principal interest was in the color models because of the need
to render molecular structures in color. PalmChem is derived from HyperChem, the core
product of Hypercube, Inc. and Hypercube, Inc. indicated it saw no real barriers to moving
many of its regular Windows applications over to the new platform. I wish they were
a little faster but one has to balance their performance with the great new freedom the
portability brings, said Dr. Rajiv Bendale, Hypercubes Director of Scientific
Support.
Background
Hypercube, Inc. is a privately held scientific
software company incorporated in 1985 and headquartered in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Their principal business location is in Gainesville, Florida. Hypercube's principal
product is HyperChem, available on Intel platforms running Microsoft Windows 95/NT, DEC
Alpha platforms running Windows NT and Silicon Graphics platforms. Other products include
HyperChem Lite, an introductory version of HyperChem; ChemPlus, a set of extensions to
HyperChem; and HyperNMR, a package that performs a priori quantum mechanical
simulation of NMR spectra.
HyperChem is a molecular modeling software product noted
for its ease of use. It is a comprehensive desktop productivity tool for visualizing,
analyzing and communicating information about molecular structures as well as for
performing the calculations of computational chemistry. It is the leading molecular
modeling software for the Microsoft Windows environment of IBM-compatible PCs.
HyperChem is a registered trademark of Hypercube, Inc.
All other trade and product names mentioned are the service marks, trademarks or
registered trademarks of their respective holders. |