"Nothing in life is to be feared. It is only to be understood."
- Marie Curie
System Requirements
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Required:
• 16-bit (thousands of colors) monitor
• at least 640x480 monitor resolution
• MacOS 7.5 or greater*
Strongly recommended:
• PowerPC Macintosh
• MacOS 8 or higher (MacOS 8.5 or higher produces a noticable increase in table drawing speed).
*may work on MacOS 7.0, 7.1, but this has not been tested and is not a supported configuration.
The Demo (Unregistered) Version
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When you download and install Synergy Creations' Periodic Table software, you will have an "unregistered" version of the software. You are free to try this version out for 30 days, but certain features have been disabled until you register the software. Specifically, you're missing out on the following VERY cool features:
• The molecular weights calculator
• The preferences feature (lets you set startup periodic table, and group numbering scheme)
• The definitions on the element information screen--except for the crystal (green) properties.
• All the "properties" periodic tables--except for the crystal (green) properties:
- Atomic Weight Periodic Table
- Melting Point Periodic Table
- Boiling Point Periodic Table
- Heat of Vaporization Periodic Table
- Heat of Fusion Periodic Table
- Specific Heat Capacity Periodic Table
- Photoelectric Work Function Periodic Table
- Electronegativity Periodic Table
- Electron Affinity Periodic Table
- 1st Ionization Energy Periodic Table
To further encourage you to register, the software annoyingly tosses you back to the main menu whenever you choose one of these disabled features... in the full version this does not happen, of course.
Registration
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If you enjoy this software and find it useful, please register to unlock all of the features! (You'll enjoy it even more!) Simply run the included "Register" program. We use the Kagi registration system because it offers a huge variety of payment options for our end users--far more than we can offer by selling directly to you. In addition to US funds, Kagi accepts credit cards, many foreign currencies, checks, or money orders. (You can find out more about this system by visting http://www.kagi.com)
Synergy Creations' Periodic Table software for Macintosh has the following pricing:
Single user license, $15 per user/station.
Site License costs $800 and covers all locations for your organization within a 16 kilometer radius of your site (10 miles). One big advantage of a Site License is that you do not need to keep track of how many people at your site are using the software. A site license covers an unlimited number of users within the 10 mile radius.
A World-Wide License costs $4750 and it covers all locations for your organization (such as a school district, all the campuses of a university, or a company) on the planet earth. Also covered are locations in low earth orbit, mid earth orbit, and geosynchronous orbit. However, you'll have to purchase another worldwide license for both the moon and Mars. ;-)
Paying for this software is fairly simple. Open the Register program that accompanies the software (double click it in the Finder). Enter your name, your email address, and the number of single user licenses you desire for each program you wish to purchase (or Site or World-Wide licenses). Save or Copy or Print the data from the Register program and send the data and payment to Kagi. More specifics on the Register program follow:
If paying with Credit Card or First Virtual, you can email or fax the data to Kagi. Their email address is sales@kagi.com and their fax number is +1 510 652-6589. You can either Copy the data from Register and paste into the body of an email message or you can Save the data to a file and you can attach that file to an email message. There is no need to compress the data file, it's already pretty small. If you have a fax modem, just Print the data to the Kagi fax number.
Payments sent via email are processed within 3 to 4 days. You will receive an email acknowledgement when it is processed. Payments sent via fax take up to 10 days and if you provide a correct internet email address you will receive an email acknowledgement.
If you are paying with Cash or USD Check you should print the data using the Register application and send it to the address shown on the form, which is:
Kagi
1442-A Walnut Street #392-QWK
Berkeley, California 94709-1405
USA
You can pay with a wide variety of cash from different countries but at present if you pay via check, it must be a check drawn in US Dollars. Kagi cannot accept checks in other currencies, the conversion rate for non-USD checks is around USD 15 per check and that is just not practical.
If you have a purchasing department, you can enter all the data into the Register program and then select Invoice as your payment method. Print three copies of the form and send it to your accounts payable people. You might want to highlight the line that mentions that they must include a copy of the form with their payment. Kagi can not invoice your company, you need to act on my behalf and generate the invoice and handle all the paperwork on your end.
Please do not fax or email payment forms that indicate Cash, Check or Invoice as the payment method. As far as we know, there is still no technology to transfer physical objects via fax or email and without the payment, the form cannot be processed.
Payments send via postal mail take time to reach Kagi and then up to 10 days for processing. Again, if you include a correct email address, you will hear from Kagi when the form is processed.
Registration Code
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When you register, be sure to include your e-mail address, as this is how we (Synergy Creations, not Kagi) will send you your registration code to unlock the software. Kagi forwards your contact information to us, and we send you the code to unlock the software. We try to do this as quickly as possible, normally within four days, hopefully faster!
If you do not have an email address, please enter your complete postal address and please remember, we do not know what country you live in so please enter that into the postal address also.
Introduction
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Over the years I've seen a number of periodic table programs for the Mac. However, I never felt that I would actually use the software--maybe it took too many clicks to get to the information I wanted; maybe it didn't have the information I wanted. The end result was I, a chemist, had no periodic table on my Mac for quick data look-ups. I was always reaching for a paper table. Well, as a die-hard Mac user, that situation had to change! My goal was to create software that I would use--it had to be easier and more convenient than grabbing a book--and I think I've met that goal. I hope you'll agree, and find the software useful as I have!
Setup
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Decompress the file you downloaded from the internet... wait... if you didn't do that, you wouldn't be reading this! Sorry! This decompression may have been automatic, or you may have to double click the file "Periodic Table.sea"
You should now have a folder called "Periodic Table" on your hard drive (wherever your browser or e-mail program normally deposits downloaded files!) Open this folder, and you'll see three things: a "Periodic Table" alias, a "Read Me" alias, and a "Resources" folder. You're reading the Read Me file right now... presumably you got here by double-clicking on that file. You can run the program by double-clicking the "Periodic Table" alias.
Sidenote: It's best not to mess with the stuff in the "Resources" folder. The program will try to check for missing files, and will probably advise you to reinstall the software if something is missing. If something is missing, things will probably not work or work quite erratically! Moral: don't mess with the resources folder; you never need to... trust us!
Apple Menu Periodic Table
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If you'd like to have the Periodic Table available for quick access from any program on your Mac, put an alias to it in your "Apple Menu Items" folder. You can do this simply by duplicating the "Periodic Table" alias, then moving this alias into the "Apple Menu Items" folder which is inside your "System Folder" on the hard drive.
Instructions
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I hope everything is fairly self-explanatory... but just in case....
The first time you start up the Periodic Table software, it will load the data then go to the table selection screen. You can **always** get back to this menu screen from ANY other part of other part of the program simply by pressing the <return> key on your keyboard.
From this menu, you can pick any of a number of periodic tables to view click on the name or the table icon to the left of the name to view any of the tables:
1. Atomic Information. This is just a standard periodic table, showing element symbols only. Clicking on any element on this table will take you to another screen detailing all the properties of the element available in this software. (See #4 below for more on this screen.) Alternatively, click the "Table Selection Screen" button in the bottom right corner to return to the menu.
2. Molecular Weight Calculator. At first glance this looks quite similar to table #1 above. However, clicking on elements in this table allows you to enter a formula and find the molecular weight of a compound quickly and easily. Once you have entered a formula, you may click on "clear formula" just above the formula display area to start entering a new formula. Click the "Table Selection Screen" button in the bottom right corner to return to the menu.
3. atomic weight, atomic radius... nearest neighbor. The other 14 periodic tables take a bit longer to view (especially on slower computers) as they are generated when you click on one of them. They take one property, and show a scale of values to emphasize relationships between elements. For instance, click the electronegativity periodic table to quickly learn that fluorine is the most electronegative, while cesium and francium are the least electronegative. A color gradient key is also shown at the top of each periodic table. Click the "Table Selection Screen" button in the bottom right corner to return to the menu, or press return to return to the menu. Also note that clicking any element on these 14 periodic tables will take you to the element information screen, displaying all the available data for that element, just as on the Atomic Information table (#1 above).
4. The Element Information screen can be directly accessed by typing in either an element symbol or element name (capitalization does NOT matter) into the text field on the menu screen and clicking the "Find" button. Try it with "Sb", then return to the menu and try "antimony"--you'll get the same results!
The Element Information screen contains all the information available about one element in this software. At the top (gray area) of the screen is the atomic number, followed by the at name, then the atomic weight. (For short-lived radioactive elements, this weight is the weight of the longest-lived isotope.)
Just below the top gray area is a description of the element's classification (on the left) and the element's electron configuration (on the right). A classification might be "transition metallic solid - group 11" for gold. (If you've changed your group numbering system with the preferences (see "Preferences-- Having it your way" below) The electron configuration is the condensed form. That is, it shortens the configuration by only writing the configuration since the last noble gas. Thus gold would be [Xe]6s1 4f14 5d10.
Below the element classification on the right are seven physical properties highlighted in red. On the left are four bonding properties, highlighted in blue. Below are four crystal properties highlighted in green. (I'll get to the icons momentarily.) You can click on any of the small periodic table icons beside any of the properties to jump to the periodic table for that property. In addition, you can click on the property NAME to get a quick definition of the property (click 'OK' to dismiss the dialog box that appears). Try it!
You will also see two (possibly three) icons below the blue bonding properties. The first icon, an erlenmeyer flask on a bunsen burner, will tell you some uses and facts about the element you're currently viewing when you click it. Close this dialog box by clicking 'OK'. The light bulb icon tells you who discovered the element, when they discovered it, and in what country they discovered it. Pretty cool! Again, click 'OK' to dismiss the dialog box.
Occasionally a third icon may be present--the radioactivity symbol. It only appears on elements which have no stable (non-radioactive) isotopes. Clicking the icon just tells you what it means--there are no non-radioactive isotopes of "element x" known. The radioactivity icon does not appear for gold, but it does appear, for example for uranium (symbol: U).
The bottom gray part of the screen contains navigation controls. On the left is an extended-form periodic table (with the lanthanides and actinides put in their proper positions). The element you are currently viewing is marked with a red dot. Clicking anywhere on this table will take you to the Atomic Information table, where you can pick another element to view. (This method was chosen over moving to the element you click directly because the squares on this mini-periodic table are so small!)
The next navigation control is the return to Table Selection Screen button... click this to go back to the menu, or just press <return>.
Finally there are four navigational arrows. These will allow you to move up or down a group (column) of the periodic table, or across a period (row) of the table. This helps in showing the relationships between elements and how their properties change going up/down a group or across a period. As you move from one element to another, the red square in the small periodic table in the bottom left corner moves with you, so you always know "where you are" on the table. The halogens (group 17) are a classic group to try this with--note how the properties vary between fluorine and astatine.
Quitting and Getting Help
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You may quit the program by going to the main menu and clicking "Quit..." in the lower right hand corner of the screen. Alternatively, you can press COMMNAND-Q from any screen to quit immediately. This is the standard Mac quit sequence for every Mac program that I am aware of!
You may get help by clicking on the Help... button from the main menu. The help screen displays this Read Me file within the program, for easy access.
Preferences-- As you like it!
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You can click the "Preferences..." button from the main menu and pick any of the periodic tables to be displayed when the program starts up. The standard setting is "Table Selection Screen" which is, of course, the main menu. But you can choose to view ANY of the periodic tables when the software starts up, bypassing the menu. If you find yourself always using the molecular weight calculator, for instance, just make it your startup periodic table!
You can switch between IUPAC and "Classic" group numbering for the Atomic Information periodic table and on the Element Information screen by clicking on any of the group numbers on the atomic information periodic table, or by changing the preference setting on the preferences screen. The preferences setting is "permanent" until you change it again; switching group numbering on the atomic information screen is not.
If you click "cancel" your preferences are not saved. If you click "OK" they are saved. Either way you are returned to the Table Selection Screen (main menu).
Other Synergy Creations Products
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Synergy Creations also produces a series of touchscreen-driven early learning/special education software known as "Yes I Can!™" More information on this series can be obtained from the Synergy Creations web page at http://web.mountain.net/~lltpft/synergy
Bug Reporting
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If you find errors in the element data in the software, or bugs in the software, your best bet is to email Synergy Creations at "bft@access.mountain.net". Although we can't promise a fix for everything, we'll try to fix any errors and get an updated version out to you.
Thanks
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Thanks to Greg Holsclaw for valuable interface conversations when this project was just getting started, and for demanding the crystal data sets be included.
Thanks to the HyperLogo mailing list--a great resource for anyone doing work with Logo and HyperStudio.
Known Issues
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When switching from Periodic Table to another application and then returning, some text elements on the screen may be lost. Just click any button to move to another screen, or cause something to happen on the screen with missing text--it will redraw. This is due to a bug in the HyperStudio Player. As soon as it is fixed, we will release an updated version to correct this.
All non-profit user groups may distribute the unregistered version at no charge, subject to the above provision.
Magazines, CD-ROM shareware collections, redistribution companies, and CD-ROM magazines MUST contact Synergy Creations for our consent before including the software in their collections.
This software is provided "as is" without any warranty of any kind. By using this software you agree to assume all costs for any damage, real or imagined. Synergy Creations nor anyone else associated with Synergy Creations' Periodic Table for Macintosh software will not be liable for the use or misuse of this software or any damages caused by that use.
Although the property values used in this software have been checked for accuracy, please do not use this software as your only source for data if you're building a nuclear power plant or the like....
Synergy Creations, the Synergy Creations logo, and Yes I Can! are trademarks of Synergy Creations. All Rights Reserved. All other trademarks are property of their respective holders. No infringement is intended.