952 readersAriadne, no. 65 (2010): Includes: “Developing Infrastructure for Research Data Management at the University of Oxford,” “Moving Researchers across the eResearch Chasm,” “Trust Me, I’m an Archivist: Experiences with Digital Donors,” and other articles. Behavioral & Social Sciences Librarian 29, no. 4 (2010): Includes “Digital Archival Image Collections: Who Are the Users?” and other articles.
1659 readersYou can find it here January 31, 2011 Aslib Proceedings 63, no. 1 (2011): Includes “EIAH Data Model: Semantic Interoperability among Distributed Digital Repositories” and other articles. Bailey, Charles W., Jr. Digital Curation and Preservation Bibliography, Version 2. Houston: Digital Scholarship, 2011. Collection Building 30, no. 1 (2011): Includes “Use Of E-journals among Research Scholars at
572 readersFrom the Scholarly Electronic Publishing Weblog: June 30, 2012 Aslib Proceedings 64, no. 4 (2012): Includes “Persistence and Half-Life of URL Citations Cited in LIS Open Access Journals” and other articles. Bailey, Charles W., Jr. Digital Curation Bibliography: Preservation and Stewardship of Scholarly Works. Houston: Digital Scholarship, 2012. Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and
1774 readers
From the Scholarly Electronic Publishing Weblog:
December 19, 2011
Annual Review of Information Science and Technology 45 (2011): Includes “Data Sharing in the Sciences,” “Some Economic Aspects of the Scholarly Journal System,” “Toward a Functional Understanding of Fair Use in U.S. Copyright Law” and other articles.
College & Research Libraries News 72, no. 11 (2011): Includes “Is Free Inevitable
849 readersArs Technica has a piece on PeerJ, an open-publishing peer-reviewed journal that is trying a few different things than most open-access scientific journals. The price for publishing in most such journals tends to be over $1,000, but PeerJ plans to allow researchers to publish one paper per year for life for $99 per researcher, or
867 readers From the website: AALL Spectrum 16, no. 6 (2012): Includes “Will An Institutional Repository Hurt My SSRN Ranking?” and other articles. Bailey, Charles W., Jr. Research Data Curation Bibliography. Houston: Digital Scholarship, 2012. Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 50, no. 4 (2012): Includes “Providing Access to E-Audiobooks: Help from the Non-Cataloger” and other articles. Collection Building
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2701 readersJanuary 31, 2012
Adler, Prudence S., Patricia Aufderheide, Brandon Butler, and Peter Jaszi, co-facilitators. Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Academic and Research Libraries. Washington, DC: Association of Research Libraries, 2012.
Aslib Proceedings 64, no. 1 (2012): Includes “Long-Term Digital Information Preservation: Challenges in Latin America,” “Organizing Open Archives via Lightweight Ontologies to
242 readers
It’s only my 7th day on the job here at PLOS as a product manager for content management. So it’s early days, but I’m starting to think about the role of JATS XML in the journal publishing process.
I come from the book-publishing world, so my immediate challenge is to get up to speed on journal publishing.
641 readers
From The Chronicle of Higer Education comes an article about Cambridge University Press and its new rental program:
Will researchers pay for short-term access to journal articles? Cambridge University Press is about to find out. The publisher has just announced a rental program for articles from the more than 280 peer-reviewed journals it publishes.
“For just £3.99, $5.99
2584 readers
From a JSTOR Announcement:
On September 6, 2011, we announced that we are making journal content in JSTOR published prior to 1923 in the United States and prior to 1870 elsewhere freely available to anyone, anywhere in the world. This “Early Journal Content” includes discourse and scholarship in the arts and humanities,