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News from JURN

Category Archives: JURN tips and tricks

The perils of long article titles

23 Tuesday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, JURN tips and tricks, JURN's Google watch

≈ 2 Comments

Here’s a useful tip: Google’s intitle: search modifier only works if the search-results title/link uses the phrase. It seems that Google is not reading the article title from your metadata, but instead reading it from the links on a larger ‘upstream’ set of search results pages. For instance, searching for intitle:”The Searchers” Ford will not pick up…

   “Home on the Range: Space, Nation, and Mobility in John Ford’s The Searchers“
   from The Japanese Journal of American Studies, No. 13 (2002)

…because the article appears in search results as…

goog-title

As you can see, “The Searchers” has dropped off the end of the link to be replaced with three dots. So using intitle: doesn’t find it.

Article titles should be around 50 characters or less (inc. spaces), to fit comfortably on a Google link. Or a 500-pixel width blog column, for that matter.

Google Scholar is more forgiving, only hitting the same problem at around 100 characters. But JURN works like the main Google, and so users should be aware of the difference.

OutWit Docs

20 Saturday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, How to improve academic search, JURN tips and tricks

≈ Leave a comment

Have you ever wanted to rip all the PDF and DOC files from a focussed Google or Google Scholar search, quickly save them all to a folder, index them with something powerful like dtSearch, and then search the real full-text from across all of them — rather than whatever bits the Googlebot indexed as it swept past, and whatever bits the Google Search ran its search from?

Or archive the entire run of a PDF ejournal that’s sitting at site:www.our-ejournal/articles/ ?

The new free OutWit Docs Firefox plugin does that, and works with the latest version of Firefox. There’s one major drawback — it hijacks the space right next to your browser’s Home icon, with a naff shiny 3D-stylee icon…

ugly

Unacceptable. It can however be moved after a bit of fiddling (Right-click, ‘customize’, and drag it out) and then placed somewhere a little more suitable and out-of-sight.

When using it, though, you also quickly come to appreciate why people should name their academic PDF files something_meaningful.pdf rather than xy2f6fjg00.pdf  And why filenames should have year rather than month first…

pdfnames

As a severe test of what after all is a mere 0.1.0.20 app, it took 9 minutes to whisk through 90 years worth of Field Artillery journal (1911-2007), running from a Google search of site:sill-www.army.mil/FAMAG/ , to find 800Mb in 996 PDF files, and to then start to download them. This was, of course, the point at which I wanted OutWit to have a big red STOP button, although quitting the app did the trick.

Site Search 1.5 for Firefox 3

20 Saturday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ Leave a comment

Here’s a useful way to extend the functionality of the JURN Firefox addon. The addon Site Search 1.5 puts a new green icon next to your normal blue one…

sitesea

…and clicking on the green icon searches the contents of the site you’re at. If you’re searching JURN and can see your starting article, then you’re assured that JURN indexes the URL where it’s kept.

Site Search 1.5 is new (May 2009) and works in the latest version of Firefox. It also adds functionality to the right-click menu when highlighting phrases in pages…

nautser

Update: January 2010. Seems to have vanished from the web. Try this (less elegant) addon instead. If you also run GreaseMonkey in Firefox, also try this script.

Installing and using the JURN Firefox addon

19 Friday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ 1 Comment

You can find the free JURN add-on for the popular Firefox web browser on this page.

Simply scroll down the page until you see JURN in the list. Handily, it’s located next to JSTOR UK…

jurntool-0

After you install it, locate the small search box alongside your browser’s address bar. You should now be able to easily toggle between JURN and other engines, via a simple drop-down menu…

jurntool-1

Choosing JURN in this way allows you to highlight and right-click on any phase in any web page, then have JURN do a search…

jurntool-2

The set of results open in a new window.

That’s it! Thanks to Pattrice Jones for making the add-on.

Seven things any new ejournal should consider

16 Tuesday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search, JURN tips and tricks, My general observations, Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

Having recently got up close and personal with thousands of ejournal URLs, here are seven suggestions for those who are considering launching an independent open ejournal in the arts and humanities.

1.   Register your own domain name. Try to make it human-readable and meaningful — e.g.: www.fabric-artists.org rather than using initials or shortened forms such as www.f-art.com. Pay for the domain and all hosted server costs up-front, for at least ten years, with a reliable commercial web hosting provider. This should not cost you more than about £600. Expensive, but it means that the university IT techies can’t capriciously juggle the root URL and thus break all your inbound links. Store all parts of the journal at your domain, calling no core content in from off-site, or from “slightly-different” URLs.

Problems solved: a) countless dead “404” links in ejournals list and directories just a few years old, and a circa 80% attrition rate on those more than five years old; b) a niche academic search-engine indexes your home page URL, but doesn’t also index the articles because you’ve stored them at a different URL.

2.   Consider using the URL and file name as a carrier for some basic metadata, including clearly indicating if the content is free or pay. For instance…

   www.technology-history.org/journal-issue-004/free-full-text/2009_adams_preindustrial_water_mills.html

Where preindustrial_water_mills are the first three words of the article title.

Without even accessing the document, a human can now glance at the URL in search results and read off:

   Journal name (Technology History)
   Issue number (Number 4)
   It’s from a journal
   It’s free full-text
   The year published (2009)
   The author surname (Adams)
   The first three words of the article title (“preindustrial water mills“)

As you can see, that’s much more useful than having something impenetrable such as:   www.hupt.stetford.edu/caij/admin/contentimages/38-02-106_h894.html   and far better than having a huge database-driven scripted URL. You’ll exclude common words such as ‘the’ from the article title, obviously.

Problems solved: a) a useful range of basic metadata is not automatically displayed alongside a link to the journal article, other than the title (if you’re lucky) and an often-misleading text snippet; b) users accessing via a standard public search-engine have to download and manually open your article file to find out simple things like when it was published and if it’s really free full-text.

3.   Don’t hang admin pages directly off the main URL. Put them in their own folder, e.g.: www.full-journal-name.org/editorial-files/our_editorial_board.html

Problem solved: Indexing the main domain also brings in all sorts of administrative fluff, old conference flyers, etc

4.   Publish in HTML, as well as in PDF.

Problem solved: PDF is print-oriented (so consider linking each issue to a POD book publisher such as Lulu), but with HTML people can do more interesting things with (like browser addons that auto-detect and auto-link citations on a page)

5.   Make sure all your articles contain basic information like: the journal title, issue number, and ideally your home-page URL in clickable form. Put this in the body text of the article. Also make sure your PDF file properties are all filled out correctly, as are your HTML headers. It’s just basic marketing really, but also useful for those who would organise knowledge.

Problem solved: A downloaded article from an open access ejournal very often has no embedded data giving the full journal title and issue number. Future generations won’t thank a researcher for telling them, “um yeah, but I once had that stuff via my personal copy of Zotero”.

6.   Zero tolerance for broken URLs and 404 errors. Never ever let your IT techies or web designers change your directory structure once it’s set. If they really have to for some world-shattering technical reason, then make sure you force them to set up durable (five-year minimum) working redirects for every article, or use some server magic to make the new structure look like the old structure to the outside world.

Problems solved: a) too many dead “404” links in ejournals directories just a few years old; b) blogs, discussion forums have many broken direct links to journal articles they’re discussing; c) there are even sometimes broken links on the journal website itself(!) caused by directory-juggling.

7.   Publicise. There’s nothing more disheartening than doing a Google search for link:www.your-established-ejournal.org — and finding that the only people who link to it are your university and a lone blog post from 2006. Being a journal on an obscure topic doesn’t mean you should be invisible. Google will bury you if you don’t have any inbound links, and (I would imagine) your authors may drift away if no-one links to or reads their articles. There’s also a whole planet out there, and the next expert in hyperkinetic light-art might be a kid sitting in a bush college in Uganda. She needs to find your excellent new article giving an overview of hyperkinetic light-art.

The mark of Zotero

06 Saturday Jun 2009

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, How to improve academic search, JURN tips and tricks

≈ 1 Comment

Some good news, just in. The U.S. courts have struck down a legal challenge to the popular open source journal citation software Zotero.

“Zotero […] operates as a browser plug-in, which allows it to cross platforms easily and integrate well with online searches; it is also able to import EndNote reference databases. But the key feature that got it into legal trouble was the fact that it was able to import and use EndNote reference style files.”

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