際際滷shows by User: santychumbe / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: santychumbe / Sun, 06 Sep 2015 09:05:01 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: santychumbe Straight from the horses mouth! /slideshow/straight-from-the-horses-mouth-52464781/52464781 journaltocsposter2011-150906090501-lva1-app6892
Low cost alternatives to traditional library discovery services: Using smart free tools to create Current Awareness services in an age of austerity. JournalTOCs connects librarians and academics with tomorrows research today, directly from the original source of information (publishers), by harnessing the power of OPML and RSS feeds]]>

Low cost alternatives to traditional library discovery services: Using smart free tools to create Current Awareness services in an age of austerity. JournalTOCs connects librarians and academics with tomorrows research today, directly from the original source of information (publishers), by harnessing the power of OPML and RSS feeds]]>
Sun, 06 Sep 2015 09:05:01 GMT /slideshow/straight-from-the-horses-mouth-52464781/52464781 santychumbe@slideshare.net(santychumbe) Straight from the horses mouth! santychumbe Low cost alternatives to traditional library discovery services: Using smart free tools to create Current Awareness services in an age of austerity. JournalTOCs connects librarians and academics with tomorrows research today, directly from the original source of information (publishers), by harnessing the power of OPML and RSS feeds <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/journaltocsposter2011-150906090501-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Low cost alternatives to traditional library discovery services: Using smart free tools to create Current Awareness services in an age of austerity. JournalTOCs connects librarians and academics with tomorrows research today, directly from the original source of information (publishers), by harnessing the power of OPML and RSS feeds
Straight from the horses mouth! from Santiago Chumbe
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WE SHOULD NOT LIGHT AN OPEN ACCESS LAMP AND THEN HIDE IT UNDER A BUSHEL! /santychumbe/we-should-not-light-an-open-access-lamp-and-then-hide-it-under-a-bushel elpub15schumbe-150906083416-lva1-app6892
This demo shows that the majority of Open Access (OA) articles published in hybrid journals cannot be recognized as OA beyond the publishers websites, or by the discovery services used by researchers to access full-text articles. We explain the causes behind the problem and discuss two of the proposed solutions: using the new NISO RP-22-2015 metadata elements and the JEMO proposal of using elements from namespaces and XML schemas already being used by publishers. We will argue that the success of a solution is, in the long run, dependent upon the cooperation of each component of the supply and delivery chain for e-journals. The contribution presents a number of case studies which show that research published as OA ends up erroneously being labelled as non-OA on the electronic services used by the end-user, when one of the components of this chain fails to include OA information in its metadata. Furthermore, the case studies demonstrate that publishers of hybrid journals should not be the only ones being answerable for the problem. In fact, during the study, some publishers were actually not allowed to enable OA identification, at the article level, by key components of the supply chain. In those case studies, we worked with a sample of publishers that implemented the JEMO solution. From those experiences we draw answers to the main question of this presentation: which solution should be used to enable OA discovery from hybrid journals? What becomes apparent is that publishers are prepared and willing to implement any of the available solutions in their publishing workflow. The presentation proposes that the simplest option is the best solution to provide standardized means to identify OA at the article level.]]>

This demo shows that the majority of Open Access (OA) articles published in hybrid journals cannot be recognized as OA beyond the publishers websites, or by the discovery services used by researchers to access full-text articles. We explain the causes behind the problem and discuss two of the proposed solutions: using the new NISO RP-22-2015 metadata elements and the JEMO proposal of using elements from namespaces and XML schemas already being used by publishers. We will argue that the success of a solution is, in the long run, dependent upon the cooperation of each component of the supply and delivery chain for e-journals. The contribution presents a number of case studies which show that research published as OA ends up erroneously being labelled as non-OA on the electronic services used by the end-user, when one of the components of this chain fails to include OA information in its metadata. Furthermore, the case studies demonstrate that publishers of hybrid journals should not be the only ones being answerable for the problem. In fact, during the study, some publishers were actually not allowed to enable OA identification, at the article level, by key components of the supply chain. In those case studies, we worked with a sample of publishers that implemented the JEMO solution. From those experiences we draw answers to the main question of this presentation: which solution should be used to enable OA discovery from hybrid journals? What becomes apparent is that publishers are prepared and willing to implement any of the available solutions in their publishing workflow. The presentation proposes that the simplest option is the best solution to provide standardized means to identify OA at the article level.]]>
Sun, 06 Sep 2015 08:34:16 GMT /santychumbe/we-should-not-light-an-open-access-lamp-and-then-hide-it-under-a-bushel santychumbe@slideshare.net(santychumbe) WE SHOULD NOT LIGHT AN OPEN ACCESS LAMP AND THEN HIDE IT UNDER A BUSHEL! santychumbe This demo shows that the majority of Open Access (OA) articles published in hybrid journals cannot be recognized as OA beyond the publishers websites, or by the discovery services used by researchers to access full-text articles. We explain the causes behind the problem and discuss two of the proposed solutions: using the new NISO RP-22-2015 metadata elements and the JEMO proposal of using elements from namespaces and XML schemas already being used by publishers. We will argue that the success of a solution is, in the long run, dependent upon the cooperation of each component of the supply and delivery chain for e-journals. The contribution presents a number of case studies which show that research published as OA ends up erroneously being labelled as non-OA on the electronic services used by the end-user, when one of the components of this chain fails to include OA information in its metadata. Furthermore, the case studies demonstrate that publishers of hybrid journals should not be the only ones being answerable for the problem. In fact, during the study, some publishers were actually not allowed to enable OA identification, at the article level, by key components of the supply chain. In those case studies, we worked with a sample of publishers that implemented the JEMO solution. From those experiences we draw answers to the main question of this presentation: which solution should be used to enable OA discovery from hybrid journals? What becomes apparent is that publishers are prepared and willing to implement any of the available solutions in their publishing workflow. The presentation proposes that the simplest option is the best solution to provide standardized means to identify OA at the article level. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/elpub15schumbe-150906083416-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> This demo shows that the majority of Open Access (OA) articles published in hybrid journals cannot be recognized as OA beyond the publishers websites, or by the discovery services used by researchers to access full-text articles. We explain the causes behind the problem and discuss two of the proposed solutions: using the new NISO RP-22-2015 metadata elements and the JEMO proposal of using elements from namespaces and XML schemas already being used by publishers. We will argue that the success of a solution is, in the long run, dependent upon the cooperation of each component of the supply and delivery chain for e-journals. The contribution presents a number of case studies which show that research published as OA ends up erroneously being labelled as non-OA on the electronic services used by the end-user, when one of the components of this chain fails to include OA information in its metadata. Furthermore, the case studies demonstrate that publishers of hybrid journals should not be the only ones being answerable for the problem. In fact, during the study, some publishers were actually not allowed to enable OA identification, at the article level, by key components of the supply chain. In those case studies, we worked with a sample of publishers that implemented the JEMO solution. From those experiences we draw answers to the main question of this presentation: which solution should be used to enable OA discovery from hybrid journals? What becomes apparent is that publishers are prepared and willing to implement any of the available solutions in their publishing workflow. The presentation proposes that the simplest option is the best solution to provide standardized means to identify OA at the article level.
WE SHOULD NOT LIGHT AN OPEN ACCESS LAMP AND THEN HIDE IT UNDER A BUSHEL! from Santiago Chumbe
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Peruvian mystery /slideshow/peruvian-mystery/31381173 peruvianmystery-140219051821-phpapp01
What is the real Peruvian Mystery? The Machu Picchu citadel? The 12-angles stone of Cuzco? The Peruvian spiders webby picket fence? The origin of the potato and its 100s of varieties? No, the real Mystery of this land of Mystery that is Peru, are the Nazca Lines. Gigantic draws located just in front of the gigantic faces found in the Eastern Island, just across the Pacific Islands. How those lines were made thousands of years ago? Why and by whom?]]>

What is the real Peruvian Mystery? The Machu Picchu citadel? The 12-angles stone of Cuzco? The Peruvian spiders webby picket fence? The origin of the potato and its 100s of varieties? No, the real Mystery of this land of Mystery that is Peru, are the Nazca Lines. Gigantic draws located just in front of the gigantic faces found in the Eastern Island, just across the Pacific Islands. How those lines were made thousands of years ago? Why and by whom?]]>
Wed, 19 Feb 2014 05:18:21 GMT /slideshow/peruvian-mystery/31381173 santychumbe@slideshare.net(santychumbe) Peruvian mystery santychumbe What is the real Peruvian Mystery? The Machu Picchu citadel? The 12-angles stone of Cuzco? The Peruvian spiders webby picket fence? The origin of the potato and its 100s of varieties? No, the real Mystery of this land of Mystery that is Peru, are the Nazca Lines. Gigantic draws located just in front of the gigantic faces found in the Eastern Island, just across the Pacific Islands. How those lines were made thousands of years ago? Why and by whom? <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/peruvianmystery-140219051821-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> What is the real Peruvian Mystery? The Machu Picchu citadel? The 12-angles stone of Cuzco? The Peruvian spiders webby picket fence? The origin of the potato and its 100s of varieties? No, the real Mystery of this land of Mystery that is Peru, are the Nazca Lines. Gigantic draws located just in front of the gigantic faces found in the Eastern Island, just across the Pacific Islands. How those lines were made thousands of years ago? Why and by whom?
Peruvian mystery from Santiago Chumbe
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Journal TOCs in VSSC Library /slideshow/vssc-caliber2013/17717270 vssccaliber2013-130326095752-phpapp02
"Linking Users and Online Journals in TOCosphere: Journal TOCs in VSSC Library" by N Narayanankutty, S Indu, V P Nisha, N Kumar and B Kusumakumari. Presented in CALIBER 2013 Library Vision 2020, "Open Access and Open Content" Theme. ]]>

"Linking Users and Online Journals in TOCosphere: Journal TOCs in VSSC Library" by N Narayanankutty, S Indu, V P Nisha, N Kumar and B Kusumakumari. Presented in CALIBER 2013 Library Vision 2020, "Open Access and Open Content" Theme. ]]>
Tue, 26 Mar 2013 09:57:52 GMT /slideshow/vssc-caliber2013/17717270 santychumbe@slideshare.net(santychumbe) Journal TOCs in VSSC Library santychumbe "Linking Users and Online Journals in TOCosphere: Journal TOCs in VSSC Library" by N Narayanankutty, S Indu, V P Nisha, N Kumar and B Kusumakumari. Presented in CALIBER 2013 Library Vision 2020, "Open Access and Open Content" Theme. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/vssccaliber2013-130326095752-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> &quot;Linking Users and Online Journals in TOCosphere: Journal TOCs in VSSC Library&quot; by N Narayanankutty, S Indu, V P Nisha, N Kumar and B Kusumakumari. Presented in CALIBER 2013 Library Vision 2020, &quot;Open Access and Open Content&quot; Theme.
Journal TOCs in VSSC Library from Santiago Chumbe
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Projet ticTOCs: Service de sommaires de revues https://fr.slideshare.net/slideshow/projet-tictocs-service-de-sommaires-de-revues/15464578 tictocslyon-121203061637-phpapp02
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Mon, 03 Dec 2012 06:16:37 GMT https://fr.slideshare.net/slideshow/projet-tictocs-service-de-sommaires-de-revues/15464578 santychumbe@slideshare.net(santychumbe) Projet ticTOCs: Service de sommaires de revues santychumbe <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/tictocslyon-121203061637-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
from Santiago Chumbe
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Emtacl10 journaltocs /slideshow/emtacl10-journaltocs/4037248 emtacl10journaltocs-100510074632-phpapp02
Mashups of Journal Feeds Produced by Publishers using journalTOCs API]]>

Mashups of Journal Feeds Produced by Publishers using journalTOCs API]]>
Mon, 10 May 2010 07:46:19 GMT /slideshow/emtacl10-journaltocs/4037248 santychumbe@slideshare.net(santychumbe) Emtacl10 journaltocs santychumbe Mashups of Journal Feeds Produced by Publishers using journalTOCs API <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/emtacl10journaltocs-100510074632-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Mashups of Journal Feeds Produced by Publishers using journalTOCs API
Emtacl10 journaltocs from Santiago Chumbe
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-santychumbe-48x48.jpg?cb=1522922966 Creator of JournalTOCs. He is the Principal Investigator of several research and knowledge transfer projects with scholarly publishers. He was the co-creator and the Manager of TechXtra (2007 - 2014), which was a spin-out of the PerX Project. At the same time than developing applied research projects and managing spin-out services, Santiago teaches at the Department of Computer Science (MACS, Heriot Watt University) E-Commerce, Web Programming and, Interactive Systems. He has been a member of the Europeana Network and the euroCRIS Organisation. www.icbl.hw.ac.uk/santiago https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/journaltocsposter2011-150906090501-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/straight-from-the-horses-mouth-52464781/52464781 Straight from the hors... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/elpub15schumbe-150906083416-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds santychumbe/we-should-not-light-an-open-access-lamp-and-then-hide-it-under-a-bushel WE SHOULD NOT LIGHT ... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/peruvianmystery-140219051821-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/peruvian-mystery/31381173 Peruvian mystery