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News from JURN

Author Archives: futurilla

Basic name authority added to Google News

26 Friday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in JURN's Google watch

≈ 2 Comments

Google News has just introduced a new feature to find articles written by someone, rather than about someone…

“If you spot an article by a specific journalist, you can click their name to bring up other articles they’ve written.”

With this and the Google News RSS feed, it’s now possible to set up a simple news feed for new articles from your fave journalists. Possibly in the elegant Firefox addon Feedly. Don’t forget to click “sort by date” before you grab the feed.

And since you can plug RSS feeds into pages, you could now set up a public Daily Something page, cut out the churnalist press-releases and just have a select band of top specialist journalists effectively writing for you. This is really going to annoy the newspaper publishers.

And you can also type a simple search modifier into the Google News search-box, e.g.:

author:”Matthew Parris”

And this can be combined with the source: modifier…

source:Washington_Times

‘It’s a long way to Pasadena’

26 Friday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Ooops!

≈ Leave a comment

Found on a university library blog today…

“As of July 1, 2009 we will no longer subscribe to a link resolver. This means that we will not be able to hook to our holdings through Google Scholar any more. The Google Scholar instructions will be removed from our web site on July 1.”

New RIN report: ‘Creating Catalogues’

26 Friday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Official and think-tank reports

≈ Leave a comment

The UK’s Research Information Network has just published (June 2009) a new report, Creating Catalogues: bibliographic records in a networked world (Direct PDF link). It gives an…

“overview of the whole process of bibliographic record production for printed and electronic books, and for scholarly journals and journal articles [ and the ] motivations and business models” […] “We find that there would be considerable benefits if libraries, along with other organisations in the supply chain, were to operate more at the network level but that there are significant barriers in the way of making significant moves in that direction.”

Of course if someone built a better works-out-of-the-box open source automatic citation parser and harvester, especially one that was able to hook into a browser addon and thus harvest from every page a scholar views…

‘The Edgeless University’ – new Demos pamphlet

25 Thursday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Official and think-tank reports

≈ Leave a comment

The British government-aligned think-tank Demos launched a new pamphlet on the 23rd, The Edgeless University : why higher education must embrace technology (PDF link). ‘Edgeless’ here means the Mandelsonian policy idea that UK higher-education must cross borders, speak many languages and generally become less insular — willing to set up partnership campuses in Europe and beyond, “exploring new ways of accrediting learning”. Technology is touted as the way to press on toward that goal, it seems. All very well (unless it’s the dreaded Moodle), but where’s the money to do so, at a time when huge cuts to libraries and to “investment in the management and curatorship of vast amounts of data and knowledge” seem to be looming into view?

Blurb goes PDF

25 Thursday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ Leave a comment

At last. Blurb has introduced a “PDF to book” service, with Adobe InDesign templates.

JURN by country

25 Thursday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in JURN metrics

≈ 1 Comment

The table below shows each nation’s proportion of site-index URLs in JURN. It’s not a table of visitors to the front-page.

To get it I ran the JURN site-index backup XML through an URL extractor and then Microsoft Word (replace all “/” with “,” to get a comma-delimited list), then Excel so I could delete a few columns, and then output a plain text list of circa 4,000 root hostnames.

I then loaded this plain hostname list into the excellent little Windows application Country Whois (which seems to be fully-functional trialware, and which based on a few of my tests uses a more precise lookup database than lesser freeware), to output some basic geolocation statistics by nation…

jurn-location

It’s not too precise — the software seems to have de-duplicated and thus removed hundreds of URLs, whereas the original list would have shown perhaps three or more ejournals hanging off the same university URL. Keeping these in would probably have boosted the results for the U.S., the U.K., and Australia even further, because that’s where the bulk of multi-journal university websites are located.

And the list also strongly underestimates the number of journals indexed from a couple of countries, where lots of journals can be brought into JURN by adding a single URL. I estimate that the following numbers should thus be added to the above table…

France: add Persee-hosted (30) + Revues-hosted (about 140) = 180.

Spanish: Dialnet- hosted (434, with perhaps ¼ arts & humanities) = 108

And perhaps around 15 each, added to Hungary, Catalonia, Russia, Mexico, Taiwan, and Brazil.

I daresay if Japan made it easy to add all their journals (in English or not) via one URL, then their total would be boosted by 100 or so. And a one URL solution for Germany could have added another 100 or so titles. So far as I know there is no such “one URL” option for Japan or Germany, other than in science.

But China, where is China? A mere two URLs that are not based in Taiwan or Hong Kong?

Gone AWOL

24 Wednesday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in JURN blogged

≈ Leave a comment

The excellent Ancient World Online has kindly blogged JURN, and added a JURN search box to the sidebar…

awol

If you’d like to do the same, just copy and paste this code.

Will your university press have to merge with the university library?

23 Tuesday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in My general observations

≈ Leave a comment

A report from the recent Conference of American University Presses barely hints at the unthinkable, made thinkable by looming cuts of billions of dollars to libraries and turbulent times at unprofitable presses… the university press will have to merge with the university library.

Pay-for-reviews

23 Tuesday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Ooops!

≈ Leave a comment

Oh dear. More dodgy dealings uncovered at Elsevier…

“Elsevier officials said Monday that it was a mistake for the publishing giant’s marketing division to offer $25 Amazon gift cards to anyone who would give a new textbook five stars in a review posted on Amazon or Barnes & Noble.”

filetype:pdf now working in Bing

23 Tuesday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, JURN tips and tricks

≈ Leave a comment

filetype:pdf is now working in Bing, the new Microsoft search-engine. Last time I tried Bing, that search modifier was not enabled.

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