Added to the JURN index:—
Ex Historia (postgraduate History journal at the University of Exeter, UK)
28 Monday Feb 2011
Posted New titles added to JURN
inAdded to the JURN index:—
Ex Historia (postgraduate History journal at the University of Exeter, UK)
28 Monday Feb 2011
Posted New titles added to JURN
inAdded to the JURN index:—
CGW : Computer Graphics World. Many of the excellent in-depth articles from recent issues are online in full-text, for free (e.g: on the CG and animation for Tron: Legacy).
23 Wednesday Feb 2011
Posted Spotted in the news
inSome of the ‘library pictures’ of the French artist Erik Desmazieres. A new edition of Desmazieres‘s three-volume catalogue raisonne will be published by the Fitch-Febvrel Gallery later in 2011. The last few copies of the original three-volume set are available at Warnock Fine Arts.
Borges’ The Library of Babel: The Salon of the Planets (1998)
Borges’ The Library of Babel: Upper Circular Gallery (1998)
La Librairie Paul Jammes (2000)
And a picture that appears to exemplify the influences on Desmazieres, Boullee’s Project for a Royal Library (1785)…
I’d also surmise that he may have been led to such work by having grown up reading French graphic novels such as Les Cites Obscures (1983, partly expanded as a ‘director’s cut’ in the mid 2000s, and partly published in English in 2004)…
03 Thursday Feb 2011
Posted My general observations
inJURN is two years old today, and currently indexing 4,101 titles.
03 Thursday Feb 2011
Another possibility for funding Open Access: the baby boomers leave a bequest in their will that is sufficient to give open access to the archives of their favourite academic journal.
03 Thursday Feb 2011
Posted JURN tips and tricks
inA handy Hathi Trust website tutorial for UK and European readers. It details how to bypass the EU’s ridiculously elongated copyright terms, and access blocked material that is freely available to Americans.
Update: as of 2017 it’s now easier just to install the Opera Web browser (desktop PC version), and use their easy free VPN service.
Update, at spring 2020, a VPN seems to only way to reach Hathi from the UK. Even then, the site is just un-usably slow. This situation has been ongoing for about six weeks, at early May 2020.
02 Wednesday Feb 2011
Readability lost the race for my Kindle, in favour of the superior bundling and magazine-like delivery abilities of Instapaper. But Readability does have an interesting new payment system…
The Readability pages may be very elegant, but unfortunately they don’t explain exactly how the system works until you press the ‘sign up’ button. Many people won’t make it that far. When you do click it, you find out that $5.00 is the minimum ‘pool’ amount that you can disburse to your content providers each month. But that can go higher. Maybe $50, if you’re doing a lot of reading for a profitable business. Then Readability tracks what you read, and sends a proportionate micro-share of your monthly fund to the content provider of each article you read on your device — while keeping 30% itself for transfer fees, admin, rights-tracking, servers, and software development. Readability might even be able to make some money selling aggregated anonymous reader data to publishers, although I haven’t dug into their privacy terms to find out. But, on the whole, such a system seems fair. If it takes off, and Instapaper also adopts it, then it could create a viable content payment ecosystem.
I’d love to see it add a slider on which you could decide how much you want to pay the content publisher, and how much should be paid directly to the author of the article. I think that’s something I’d even like to see ethical newspaper and magazine publishers flagging on the article itself — “for every dollar we get for this article in voluntary microfees, 35 cents is diverted directly to the author”. However, given the senile newspaper industry’s attitude to its creatives, and to ethics in general, that may be unlikely. More likely is that they sue companies such as Readability/Instapaper out of existence, once they start making money from ad-stripping. Then the newspapers will launch their own ‘meta payment’ service for the bundling and delivery of reader-selected ad-stripped content.
01 Tuesday Feb 2011
A new service from Google, Google Art Project…
“Explore museums from around the world, discover and view hundreds of artworks at incredible zoom levels, and even create and share your own collection of masterpieces.”
Based on the Google Maps technology and its familiar interface, the images are gigapixel and presented without watermarks. Just 17 gigapixel images to start with, and there are also StreetView-like tours of their museums. If images look a little blurry as you zoom in, then simply give time for the tiles to load (in a similar way to Google Earth), and the sharper tiles should appear.
The “Add” button for the creation of personal collections doesn’t seem to work in Firefox.
01 Tuesday Feb 2011
Posted New titles added to JURN
inFour titles newly added to the JURN index:—
Harmony : forum of the Symphony Orchestra Institute
Classical Journal (book reviews only)
Southwest Philosophical Studies : the journal of the New Mexico West Texas Philosophical Society
Illinois Classical Studies (now indexed at the article level)
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Already indexed, but now added to the Directory: Helade (“biannual electronic journal on Ancient Studies”)
01 Tuesday Feb 2011
Posted New titles added to JURN
inThree titles newly added to the JURN index:—
Kieler Beitrage zur Filmmusikforschung (Kiel Contributions to Film Music Research. Seems to usually publish one or two English articles in each issue)
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Publications archive of journals published in French by ICRAM, including:
Resonance (1993-1999, IRCAM. French)
InHarmoniques (1986-1991, IRCAM. French)
Cahiers de l’Ircam : recherche musicale (1993-1996, IRCAM. French)