- EContent article I was interviewed for: One Book, Many Covers: Meeting the Challenges of Multiplatform Publishing http://t.co/AYKjm29 #li #
- 1Night.me: Renting (text)books a day at a time. #launch http://t.co/2TgThH0 via @1nightMe #
- BMJ Group blogs: BMJ Web Development Blog » Blog Archive » Scopus citation links, topic collection.. http://bit.ly/j1Jd0x #
- Scopus Alerts for BlackBerry now available – http://bit.ly/kCqoRU (for subscribers) alongside existing iPhone and Android versions. #
Tag: elsevier
Weekly Activity for 2010-11-28
- Liked “Another win 4 #openscience Elsevier launches new SciVerse app store w/ Mendeley data APIs http://bit.ly/dRPmrY" http://ff.im/-unKUl #
- Liked “http://developer.sciverse.com/sdk An eclipse plugin for the SciVerse Applications software development kit” http://ff.im/-u2lkB #
- Liked “browsing the sciverse app gallery http://www.applications.sciverse.com/action/gallery – more here than i…” http://ff.im/-tME82 #
- I just learned my colleague sent a response earlier today. We are brainstorming on how to get around this. re: http://ff.im/tAVIf #
- Liked “Rankings: WoS vs Scopus” http://ff.im/-cvWAc #
- Liked “Kein Link? RT @Scopus JAMA article says: Scopus has 22% more citations than WoS” http://ff.im/-8vvlr #
Presentation: Connecting Publications and Data – Connecting Scientific Resources Breakout – Science Online London 2010
Session abstract:
Do you have data? Have you decided that you want to publish that data in a friendly way? Then this session is for you. Allowing your data to be linked to other data sets is an obvious way to make your data more useful, and to contribute back to the data community that you are a part of, but the mechanics of how you do that is not always so clear cut. This session will discuss just that. With experts from the publishing world, the liked data community, and scientific data services, this is a unique opportunity to get an insight into how to create linked scientific data, and what you can do with it once you have created it.
– http://www.scienceonlinelondon.org/programme.php?tab=abstracts#breakout8
Richard Wallis’ slides from the session are available here:
http://www.slideshare.net/rjw/the-linked-data-publishing-threestep
Thanks to Ian Mulvany for organizing the panel:
http://directedgraph.net/2010/08/27/connecting-scientific-data/
links for 2010-02-16
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Article by Rafael: “Offering their content through open APIs, publishers and platform providers can present researchers with application building tools based on more comprehensive content. In fact, publishers and platform providers have an opportunity to serve as the host of the new scientific knowledge ecosystem that is evolving.”
links for 2010-01-29
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The Indispensable Man of Open Science: A Talk with Cameron Neylon « Significant ScienceLengthy and detailed interview with Cameron Neylon touching on just about everything related to Open Science.