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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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CouchDBGeoCouchGISHomeBrewRubyComputer and Information Sciences
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BHLBioStorDjVuIPadComputer and Information Sciences
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CitationIPadUser InterfaceComputer and Information Sciences
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Quick demo of the mockup I alluded to in the previous post. Here's a screen shot of the article "PhyloExplorer: a web server to validate, explore and query phylogenetic trees" (doi:10.1186/1471-2148-9-108) as displayed as a web-app on the iPad.

CouchDBIPadJSONMendeleyComputer and Information Sciences
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Article 2.0Google MapsIPadMendeleyNatureComputer and Information Sciences
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In previous articles I've looked at how various apps display scientific articles. The apps I looked at were:PLoS ReaderNaturePapersMendeleySo, where next? As Ian Mulvany noted in a comment on an earlier post, I haven't attempted to summarise the best user interface metaphors for navigation. Rather than try and do that in the abstract, I'd like to create some prototypes to play with various ideas.

CitationCitation ContextGrandChallengeIBooksIPadComputer and Information Sciences
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Apple's iBooks app is an ePub and PDF reader, and one could write a lengthy article about its interface. However, in the context of these posts on visualising the scientific article there's one feature that has particularly struck me. When reading a book that cited other literature the citations are hyper-links: click on one and iBooks forwards you (via the page turning effect) to the reference in the book's bibliography.

IPadPapersTouchComputer and Information Sciences
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Continuing the series of posts about reading scientific articles on the iPad, here are some quick notes on perhaps the most polished app I've seen, Papers for iPad. As with earlier posts on the Nature and PLoS apps, I'm not writing an in-depth review - rather I'm interested in the basic interface design.Papers is available for the Mac, as well as the iPhone and iPad.

MendeleyOpen DataOpen SourceScience 2.0Computer and Information Sciences
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Paulo Nuin, not the biggest fan of Mendeley wrote a blog post entitled Mendeley is going to be open source, in which he wrote:Among the essays Paulo read is Jason Hoyt's post on the Mendeley blog: Dear researcher, which side of history will you be on?. In response to a question about open sourcing the Mendeley client, Jason replied:Despite the fact that open sourcing the desktop client is the second most requested feature for Mendeley, I think