Utilisation de Let's Encrypt pour le site gitenberg.org (voir : https://id-libre.org/shaarli/?TeBI8Q ), hébergé sur le cloud d'Amazon, en utilisant notamment Docker.
Bibliothécaires de tous les pays, aidez à chiffrer la navigation de vos usagers !
via le planet code4lib : http://planet.code4lib.org/
Le P.A.U, le premier PC à accès universel
Il s'agit d'une library pour du deep learning, open-sourced par Google.
via : http://www.wired.com/2015/11/google-open-sources-its-artificial-intelligence-engine
Une méthode pour prendre le contrôle de "son" Kindle. Je le signale, parce que je trouve particulièrement intéressant de voir à quel point c'est ardu, alors que visiblement sous le capot c'est un linux. Que d'efforts pour fermer ce qui est ouvert par design ! C'est bô.
Via le planet libre
RFC de mai 2014 : la surveillance de masse (ou intrusive) est une attaque
Traduction d'une self-defense par l'une des personne derrière Sci-Hub.
Annonce de l'annonce d'une image docker officielle pour SolR.
via Planet Code4Lib
Un color picker original et beau...
via le Harvard Library Innovation Lab : http://librarylab.law.harvard.edu/blog/2015/11/02/link-roundup-november-2-2015/
Dans un mouvement de simplification, j'ai désactivé l'installation projet-autoblog et l'installation du vieux shaarlo sur id-libre.
Permet de comprendre la syntaxe de recherche utilisée dans les interfaces construites sur invenio (rero doc, zenodo, etc.)
From Theory to Action: “Good Enough” Digital Preservation Solutions for Under-Resourced Cultural Heritage Institutions
HDF5 is a data model, library, and file format for storing and managing data. It supports an unlimited variety of datatypes, and is designed for flexible and efficient I/O and for high volume and complex data. HDF5 is portable and is extensible, allowing applications to evolve in their use of HDF5. The HDF5 Technology suite includes tools and applications for managing, manipulating, viewing, and analyzing data in the HDF5 format.
EDIT : https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_Data_Format
The RDA Metadata Standards Directory Working Group is supported by individuals and organizations involved in the development, implementation, and use of metadata for scientific data. The overriding goal is to develop a collaborative, open directory of metadata standards applicable to scientific data can help address infrastructure challenges.
The Dryad Digital Repository is a curated resource that makes the data underlying scientific publications discoverable, freely reusable, and citable. Dryad provides a general-purpose home for a wide diversity of datatypes.
Dryad’s vision is to promote a world where research data is openly available, integrated with the scholarly literature, and routinely re-used to create knowledge.
Our mission is to provide the infrastructure for, and promote the re-use of, data underlying the scholarly literature.
Dryad is governed by a nonprofit membership organization. Membership is open to any stakeholder organization, including but not limited to journals, scientific societies, publishers, research institutions, libraries, and funding organizations.
Publishers are encouraged to facilitate data archiving by coordinating the submission of manuscripts with submission of data to Dryad. Learn more about submission integration.
Dryad originated from an initiative among a group of leading journals and scientific societies in evolutionary biology and ecology to adopt a joint data archiving policy (JDAP) for their publications, and the recognition that easy-to-use, sustainable, community-governed data infrastructure was needed to support such a policy.
EDIT : le wiki qui va avec : http://wiki.datadryad.org/Main_Page