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iPhylo

Rants, raves (and occasionally considered opinions) on phyloinformatics, taxonomy, and biodiversity informatics. For more ranty and less considered opinions, see my Twitter feed.ISSN 2051-8188. Written content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
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One of the things I keep revisiting is the way we display scientific articles. Apart from Nature's excellent iPhone and iPad apps, most efforts to re-imagine how we display articles are little more than glorified PDF viewers (e.g., the PLoS iPad app). Part of the challenge is that if we make the article more interactive we immediately confront the problem of how to link to other content.

Published

This post is simply a quick note on some experiments with DjVu that I haven't finished. Much of BHL's content is available as DjVu files, which contain both the scanned images and OCR text, complete with co-ordinates of each piece of text. This means that it would, in principle, be trivial to lay out the bounding boxes of each text element on a web page.

Published

Tom Pasley recently drew my attention to CrossRef's addition of a XML format parameter to their OpenURL resolver. Adding &format=xml to the OpenURL request retrieves bibliographic metadata in "unixref" format (for those who like this sort of thing, the XML schema is here). The biggest change is now the metadata lists more than one author for multi-author papers.