Hi Paul, Please see below:
Martin Tollinger will write an e-mail soon for the copyright issue, as he just told me. Given that my Matlab files were all based upon code I got from him, and that he had written with Nikolai, they should have their names there.
I was not aware that Martin Tollinger was also involved. So it would be crucial for him to agree on the licence. I might write to him to find out more about the intricate history of this code.
In the meantime, Dominique is going to send you the MQ code. We have tested it on our side with experimental data.
The place to upload the code would be the task at https://gna.org/task/?7712. Simply click on 'Post a comment' and add some text along the lines of 'Author 1 contributed code in 2012, Author 2 in 2013, etc.'. We can then ask each author to agree to the licence on the mailing list - each new piece of code requires this. Or if Dominique is the unique author, then he can agree in the comment (something basic such as 'I agree to licence this code under the GNU General Public Licence, version three or higher' is sufficient). There is then a section called 'Attached files' where files can be attached. Cheers! We can discuss the structure of the code later, but I am guessing that it would be sufficient to simply copy the code for the MQ models for calculating R2eff. Is this MQ code also for R1rho data? For the experimental data, it would be good to get that also into relax (for one or two residues, and randomised if it is not published yet and should be kept secret). That data can then form part of a system test to make sure that the MQ code is functioning correctly forever. I'll talk about the rest of your message in a second post, to keep subjects separate. Cheers, Edward