or minutes here for the best search possible.
\bu can spend days searchingforchemical information here...
Dialog - worlds biggest single source of online chemical information. Chemical literature searching has certainly come out of the stacks. Thanks to computers, there are faster, more thorough ways to work. Clearly the best of those ways is the Dialog Service, for these reasons:
Who has the most? Dialog, with more than 4,000,000 references to Chemical Abstracts (CA Search) alone. And those files, reaching back to 1967, include bibliographic citations and index information for all years. Then, in addition to CA Search, Dialog has almost as many more references to other chemical information in journal articles, patents, reports, government documents, and other worldwide published literature.
How do you search for substances? You can find more than 630,000 substances by nomenclature, molecular formulas, ring data, element counts, and other characteristics. These include all
substances cited by CA at least twice between 1972 and 1978. You can also search the chemical literature in Dialog by 16 different access points including title words, subject terms, patent numbers, authors, and CA Registry Numbers. And Dialog is the only online system featuring related term displays and incorporating CA's Index Guide.
How do you learn to use Dialog? Because chemical databases differ so from databases of other subjects, we provide subject-specific search training —for both the librarian and the chemist, in lecture format as well as through an online practice file. For complete information, call or write to Lockheed Information Systems, Dept. 52-80AC,3460 Hillview Ave. Palo Alto, CA 94304. In the U.S.A., call toll-free (800) 227-1960; in California, (800) 982-5838.
Lockheed Dialog
CIRCLE 125 ON READER SERVICE CARD
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL. 52, NO. 9, AUGUST 1980 · 1029 A