From keruu&$at$&ifm.liu.se Tue Apr 1 11:33:15 1997 Received: from ifm.liu.se for keruu _-at-_)ifm.liu.se by www.ccl.net (8.8.3/950822.1) id LAA07942; Tue, 1 Apr 1997 11:13:07 -0500 (EST) Received: from ike.ifm.liu.se (keruu _-at-_)ike.ifm.liu.se [130.236.171.139]) by ifm.liu.se (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id SAA20320 for ; Tue, 1 Apr 1997 18:13:06 +0200 (MET DST) From: Kenneth Ruud Received: (keruu "-at-" localhost) by ike.ifm.liu.se (SMI-8.6/8.6.9) id SAA09138 for chemistry "-at-" www.ccl.net; Tue, 1 Apr 1997 18:13:04 +0200 Date: Tue, 1 Apr 1997 18:13:04 +0200 Message-Id: <199704011613.SAA09138 _-at-_)ike.ifm.liu.se> To: chemistry#* at *#www.ccl.net Subject: Release of free quantum chemistry program: Dalton Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-MD5: 3Wwb5CD0UIR4duQfew8kFA== ANNOUNCEMENT We are happy to announce the release of the Dalton quantum chemistry program, Release 1.0 (1997) to the computational chemistry/physics community. Dalton is a complete, powerful quantum chemistry program for the calculation of molecular properties with SCF, MP2 or MCSCF wave functions. The strengths of the program are mainly in the areas of magnetic and (frequency-dependent) electric properties, and for studies of molecular potential energy surfaces, both for static and dynamical investigations, as well as stable algorithms for converging large MCSCF wave functions (also excited states). The program is distributed freely to all academic users, although we require all users to sign a copyright and license agreement. For more complete information on how to obtain a copy of the program, more information about what the program can and can not do, please check out our homepage at http://www.kjemi.uio.no/software/dalton/dalton.html, or send an e-mail to dalton-admin*- at -*kjemi.uio.no. The complete author list of the program is: T.Helgaker, H.J.Aa.Jensen, P.Joergensen, J.Olsen, K.Ruud, H.AAgren, T.Andersen, K.L.Bak, V.Bakken, O.Christiansen, P.Dahle, E.K.Dalskov, T.Enevoldsen, B.Fernandez, H.Heiberg, H.Hettema, D.Jonsson, S.Kirpekar, R.Kobayashi, H.Koch, K.V.Mikkelsen, P.Norman, M.J.Packer, T.Saue, P.R.Taylor, and O.Vahtras On behalf of the authors, Kenneth _______________________________________________________________________________ Kenneth Ruud, Ph.D.-student in Chemical Physics at the Department of Chemistry, University of Oslo, Norway. E-mail: kenneth.ruud*- at -*kjemi.uio.no I don't know what the computer language of the year 2000 will look like, but I know it will be called FORTRAN. _______________________________________________________________________________