"A free and open-source software project launched in 2011, PressForward enables teams of researchers to aggregate, filter, and disseminate relevant scholarship using the popular WordPress web publishing platform. Just about anything available on the open web is fair game: traditional journal articles, conference papers, white papers, reports, scholarly blogs, and digital projects."
Un tuto pour faire un wordcloud avec R
Edit : le package tm a changé donc on obtient une erreur, voir http://stackoverflow.com/questions/24191728/documenttermmatrix-error-on-corpus-argument
La solution est de remplacer corpus <- tm_map(corpus, tolower) par corpus <- tm_map(corpus, content_transformer(tolower))
Un plugin à ajouter à Zotero pour visualiser le contenu de ses collections bibliographiques : wordcloud, n-grams, graphs sur la base de dbpedia, etc.
Google va indiquer sur son moteur de recherche, si la recherche est faite par un mobile, si le site donné en résultat est mobile-friendly ou non. Ce qui a un impact certain sur le désire de visite. Pour les bibliothèques aussi...
Outil d'exportation des textes contenus dans wikisource (en et fr) en ePub. Bien pratique pour lire des textes appartenant au domaine public sur sa liseuse.
code source : https://github.com/wsexport/tool
Procédure d'installation de Kuali OLE
"An integrated suite of cloud-based library management applications". Le cloudy LSP (Library Services Platform) d'OCLC
Le wiki de summa, un outil de recherche intégrée, un discovery tools, développé en Open Source (libre?) par le Danemark et la bibliothèque nationale.
Logiciel de gestion de collection muséale, libre.
Ted Lawless has "published some code for mapping CSV data to RDF using Python and JSON-LD on Github."
D-Lib Magazine is an electronic publication with a focus on digital library research and development, including new technologies, applications, and contextual social and economic issues. D-Lib Magazine appeals to a broad technical and professional audience. The primary goal of the magazine is timely and efficient information exchange for the digital library community to help digital libraries be a broad interdisciplinary field, and not a set of specialties that know little of each other.
"Digital Library of Information Science and Technology (DLIST) is a cross-institutional, subject-based, open access digital archive for the Information Sciences, including Archives and Records Management, Library and Information Science, Information Systems, Digital Curation, Museum Informatics, records management and other critical information infrastructures. The archive can be used for new materials as well as for classics such as the The Five Laws of Library Science 1931, Ranganathan, S. R. We also are particularly interested in multi-cultural and cultural competency aspects of the DLIST subject domain. Academics, researchers, and practitioners create a wealth of content that includes published papers, instructional materials, tutorials for software and databases, bibliographies, pathfinders, bibliometric datasets, dissertations and reports. DLIST aims to capture this wealth of information in a library that is openly available for re-use and global dissemination. Open deposit processes where authors retain copyright and facilities for full-text storage in a variety of formats are used."
"The big deal is that Unix is the 800 lb. gorilla of the IT world. While desktops and laptops are usually a pretty even split between Windows and Mac, the server world is almost entirely Unix (either Linux or BSD, both of which are UNIX variants). If you work in a reasonably technical position, you have probably had to log in to one of these Unix servers before to do something. If you are in library school and looking to get a tech oriented library job after graduating, this WILL happen to you, maybe even before you graduate (a good 50% of my student worker jobs were the result of knowing Unix). As libraries move away from vendor software and externally hosted systems towards Open Source software, Unix use is only going to increase because pretty much all Open Source software is designed to run on Linux (which is itself Open Source software). The road to an Open Source future for libraries is paved with LIS graduates who know their way around a command line."
"Mastering Zotero will be a comprehensive user guide for the Zotero reference manager. Writing has just started, and entries on many topics still need to be written. Entries that are already in a usable state are listed below."
Déjà relativement complet. En licence CC-BY-SA, dispo sur github
Tableau des compatibilités entre les différentes licences CreativeCommons. Chose intéressante, même si c'est évident, la CC-BY-NC-ND n'est compatible avec aucune autre, pas même elle-même...
via grolimur
"Kartenportal.CH est le portail d’accès aux cartes géo- graphiques des bibliothèques et archives suisses. Lancez votre recherche dans son métacatalogue qui comprend un demi-million de cartes et trouvez un fabuleux trésor de cartes comprenant des cartes manuscrites médiévales ainsi que des cartes imprimées actuelles."
Tu lui donnes du texte à manger et l'outil repère les mots les plus fréquents et va chercher du contenu visuel dans la Digital Public Library of America, Europeana et Flickr Commons.
Étonnant. Possibilité de le faire fouiller ta collection Zotero. Développé pas loin de la Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media.
Un projet Digital Humanities...