Avogadro at the APS March Meeting and Q-Chem Workshop

So last week was extremely busy. The APS March Meeting was held in Pittsburgh and Q-Chem held a workshop on Q-Chem at the end of the week. I presented a poster on Avogadro (shown below), met lots of interesting people and got lots of new ideas for both research and Avogadro.

Avogadro poster

As we push towards making a 1.0 release of Avogadro, getting feedback from users in the scientific community is extremely important. As Q-Chem chose to use Avogadro as the builder/visualizer in their workshop I had the opportunity to observe new Avogadro users interact with our application for the first time. I also had the opportunity to help them overcome some initial issues and gained a few new insights.

I was very pleased to meet people at all stages of their career who were very interested in having an open source application that can provide a framework for building and visualizing molecules. I also realized that two of the most sought after features in Avogadro right now are the capability to easily make movies, and a z-matrix editor. People loved the ray-traced images of surfaces, coincidentally I received a request from someone in the press wanting to use an image I put up on my blog last year of ray-traced benzene molecules.

I look forward to hearing from some of the new users we gained in the last week. It is great to see Avogadro receiving more attention. I have started to work on the z-matrix editor and spent the weekend experimenting with movies - more to come soon!

Road Trip to Canada

So last weekend Louise and I went on our first big road trip to Canada. Neither of us have been to Canada before, and with Benoit now living in Toronto it seemed like a great opportunity to go and catch up. Back in July 2007 I visited Benoit in Paris during my GSoC where we met for the first time in person. Now, two years on we met for the second time in person and introduced our partners to each other too.

Niagara Falls Canada

We left at around 4pm on Friday, I think we crossed the border at about 9pm and got almost all the way there before getting lost in Toronto. Our friend's GPS failed us once we crossed the border and Toronto is a pretty big place. I think we finally arrived just before midnight, tired after the long drive. The next day we drove back down to almost the border to check out the Niagara Falls, which we had never seen before. It rained almost the entire day but we still had a really nice day out.

As well as checking out Niagara Falls on the Canadian side in the rain, we found some very expensive shops in Niagara on the Lake, I bought some maple syrup and some maple spread (still not quite sure what to do with that). We discovered that if you get bored of the main attraction you can always check out one of the many casinos too.... We decided to forgo the gambling and instead headed back to Toronto.

Dinner in Toronto

Once we had dried off a little we all headed out to get some dinner in Toronto's chinatown. We enjoyed some great Vietnamese food and compared notes on moving continents, life in academia, Google Summer of Code and life in general. It is great to still be in touch with many of the people I made friends with during my Google Summer of Code and I hope others get as much out of it as I did.

On Sunday we lost an hour to daylight savings time, wish we could stop doing the clock change thing twice a year... We decided to head back as Louise was tired (she is conducting a geek cloning experiment for me). It rained for most of the drive back too, we did another border crossing and got back home at around 7pm. I do not think our carbon footprint is looking great for the weekend but it was great to catch up and see where Benoit is living now. My thanks to Benoit and Irene for being such great hosts.

Back to work this week, preparing for a big conference next week. I still love to travel, it was great to avoid the airports for once!


Avogadro 0.9.2 Released

I just finishing tagging Avogadro 0.9.2 earlier today. I possibly procrastinated on tagging this one a little as February has not been my finest month. I didn't see any reason to make another release in that hellish month when I could wait a day. This release is a little earlier than we had scheduled, but it contains lots of bug fixes and improvements along with a couple of new features.

Avogadro 0.9.2

Among the highlights I tracked down our orphaned tools and extensions, so Avogadro closes down far more gracefully now than it once did. I went hunting for memory leaks and QObjects with no parents. I added some initial support for building supercells such as the zeolite structure shown in the screenshot. I also fixed some bugs with electron density calculation and this works much better and faster now. I also improved the Linux desktop user experience by adding a .desktop file, icon and mime type associations. Looks very swish.

I built a new Windows release without Python, Tim will put one up with Python support soon, bumped the Gentoo ebuild as 0.9.1 was bumped by someone else and it could not locate its plugins. I have made a number of improvements to our plugin loading to ensure that it is relative to the binary location. This should make relocatable binaries on all platforms quite feasible. March is a busy month but I hope to be able to make some more big improvements. If it goes as badly as February I may consider hibernation as an option though!

I will be presenting some of this work at the APS and a quantum chemistry workshop in March too, both here in Pittsburgh. We always love to have feedback, bug reports, patches or be invited to give talks at conferences in far off places! Here is hoping for a better month...