Reuse Rights: Disney’s History of Recycling Animation
A historical look at Disney’s reuse of its own content.
What’s Hot and Cooking In Scholarly Publishing
In today's post, chefs Alice Meadows and Tim Vines interview Richard Wynne, Founder of Rescognito, a free service for recognizing and promoting Open Research.
A historical look at Disney’s reuse of its own content.
Dawit Tegbaru offers ideas on how the scholarly communications community can take action to address inequity.
The DocMaps Project offers a machine-readable, interoperable and extensible framework for capturing valuable context about the processes used to create research products such as journal articles.
Emerald Publishing’s identity strategy aims to re-conceive their publishing platform as a digital experience that builds emotive connections with users and seamlessly delivers the answers they need.
The sudden virtualization of conferences sparked a flurry of experimentation. It is now time to build the future of the scholarly meeting.
NASA offers up stunning footage of the Perseverance Rover landing on Mars.
Transparency around research methodologies is essential for driving public trust and accurate, reproducible research results.
Robert Harington asks if we need more than Open Access (OA) to truly democratize science?
An update and a correction for an earlier post on research publication growth in 2020.
Following our conversation about Neurodiversity in December, Publishing Enabled return with a discussion about how to make academic conferences more accessible to people with disabilities.
Robert Harington talks to a range of expert stakeholders with differing views about the Plan S Rights Retention Strategy and Creative Commons Licensing. Part 2. of 2 interview posts.
Robert Harington talks to a range of expert stakeholders with differing views about the Plan S Rights Retention Strategy and Creative Commons Licensing. Part 1 of 2 interview posts.
Unpacking each word — rights, retention, and strategy — enables understanding what this policy is and how it functions within the Plan S compliance framework.
Ralph Youngen and Todd Toler look back on what’s been learned over the course of the first year of implementing GetFTR, a solution to enable faster access for researchers to the published journal articles.
We’re off today for the US holiday, regular posting to resume tomorrow.