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Archives: multitouch

Is It a Tablet? Is It a Laptop? Digging Into the Microsoft Surface RT

Microsoft’s Surface RT marks the software stalwart’s entry into the hardware and tablet market. Too bad it’s late and awkward.

  • By David Smith
  • Feb 26, 2013
  • 3 Comments

A Future of Touch and Gestures: New Interfaces Driving Scientific Information Presentation

Image by jdlasica via Flickr For scholarly publishers, librarians, and readers, the article remains the coin of the realm — a text-based narrative that strips data of all but its most superficial aspects and doesn’t integrate itself into the body […]

  • By Alix Vance
  • May 4, 2010
  • 16 Comments

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  • Guest Post — Who Cares About Publication Integrity?
  • Still Ambiguous at Best? Revisiting “If We Don’t Know What Citations Mean, What Does it Mean When We Count Them”
  • Guest Post — Has Peer Review Created a Toxic Culture in Academia? Moving from ‘Battering’ to ‘Bettering’ in the Review of Academic Research

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jafurtado Jose Afonso Furtado @jafurtado ·
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Guest post by Chhavi Chauhan (@chhavic), Shaina Lange, Tony Chen (@TonyWChenPhD) : Reducing the Burden of Diversity Tax: Recommendations for Organizations (fourth in a series of posts) / @scholarlykitchn https://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2022/08/11/guest-post-reducing-the-burden-of-diversity-tax-recommendations-for-organizations/

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ceptional Alex Holcombe @ceptional ·
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Science continues to sleepwalk into politicians interfering: journals, publishers, and universities do very little about accusations of fraud, and what they do do takes forever. You've heard it before, but here's an impressive list. https://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2022/08/18/guest-post-who-cares-about-publication-integrity/ via @scholarlykitchn

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• Today on @scholarlykitchn • https://scholarlykitchen.sspnet.org/2022/08/18/guest-post-who-cares-about-publication-integrity/?utm_campaign=coschedule&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=ScholarlyPub

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The mission of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP) is to advance scholarly publishing and communication, and the professional development of its members through education, collaboration, and networking. SSP established The Scholarly Kitchen blog in February 2008 to keep SSP members and interested parties aware of new developments in publishing.

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