Commission on Crystallographic Computing (CCOM)
Membership
- A.L. Spek (Chair, The Netherlands)
- L. M. D. Cranswick (Canada)
- R.W. Grosse-Kunstleve (USA)
- A. Gualtieri (Italy)
- Luhua Lai (People's Republic of China)
- A. McCoy (UK)
- A. Nakagawa (Japan)
- S. Parsons (UK)
- H.R. Powell (UK)
Consultants
- I.D. Brown (Canada)
- E. Dodson (UK)
- D.J. Watkin (UK)
Annual Reports
Triennial Reports
CCOM
Terms of Reference
After the close of the Fourth General Assembly, the Executive Committee
appointed an ad-hoc Committee to consider what action the Union
could take with respect to a number of questions raised at that Assembly
concerning crystallographic computing. The final report of this
ad-hoc
Committee was sent to the National Committees in June as an appendix to
the Agenda, and it is added to these Minutes as Annex I, Appendix C (b)
(see p. 19).
Following the recommendation of the ad-hoc Committee, the
Executive
Committee proposed that a Commission on Crystallographic Computing be
set
up, with the following terms of reference:
-
(a) The Commission shall promote the collection and dissemination on an
international scale of information relating to crystallographic
computing,
with special reference to general-purpose digital computers;
-
(b) The Commission may undertake any activity related to crystallgraphic
computation;
-
(c) The Commission shall have power to appoint: (i) Consultants to
assist
and advise in all matters relating to specific machines, and (ii)
Regional
Correspondents to assist in the collection and distribution of
information
on a geographical basis.
After a short discussion, during which the General Secretary explained
that the Executive Committee had already presented nominations for the
new Commission subject to the approval of its establishment by the
General
Assembly, the Assembly approved the formation of a Commission on
Crystallographic
Computing with the above terms of reference, and decided that its
elected
membership should be five.
Ad-hoc Committee on Computing Methods
After due consideration of the varied needs of those engaged in
crystallographic
computing, of the existing methods of sharing information, and of
probable
future trends, the Committee advised the Executive Committee at its
meeting
in Leningrad that there appears to be a need for an international scheme
for collecting, cataloguing and digesting, and redistributing
information
relative to digitial computers suitable for crystallographic work and
the
crystallographic programs available for each. The Committee considered
that the work warranted the establishment by the Union of a new
Commission,
and recommended its formation. In reponse to a request from the
Executive
Committee, the Committee has since drafted terms of reference for the
Commission,
and made recommendations as to its name and composition. (A summary of
these appears in the Annual Report of Executive Committee for 1959.) The
Committee has discussed in detail and made recommendations on the types
of information to be sought, the procedures best suited to its
collection
and redistribution, and the most useful ways of summarizing and
comparing
the data.
IUCr Secretariat
Copyright
© International Union of Crystallography