Publicaciones de Rogue Scholar

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Appalachian HistorySmyth County VAHistoria y ArqueologíaInglés
Publicado in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series Why Marion mattered In the last winter of the war, southwestern Virginia still fed the Confederacy’s armies with salt from Saltville and lead from the mines along the upper New River. Those resources moved over the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad through Wytheville and Marion. Any serious Federal raid into the mountains would try to break that industrial chain.

Appalachian HistoryCullman County ALHistoria y ArqueologíaInglés
Publicado in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History What happened At daybreak on April 30, 1863, Union Col. Abel D. Streight’s provisional brigade was pushing east along Sand Mountain when Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest’s pursuing cavalry struck the column’s rear at Day’s Gap in present-day Cullman County. The Federals stood, repulsed the first assaults, and kept moving.

Appalachian HistoryHaywood County NCHistoria y ArqueologíaInglés
Publicado in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History Setting the stage in Western North Carolina By the spring of 1865, war in North Carolina had fractured into scattered columns, couriers, and rumors. Gen. Joseph E. Johnston had agreed to surrender terms to Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman on April 26 at Bennett Place, yet in the mountains the situation remained fluid. Confederate forces in the Western District under Brig. Gen.

Appalachian HistoryHarlan County KYHistoria y ArqueologíaInglés
Publicado in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series Evarts High School stood at the heart of Clover Fork for most of the twentieth century, first as the community’s own secondary school, then as one of three high schools in the Harlan County district. The Wildcats carried blue and gold in halls filled with class banners, pep club signs, and KHSAA schedules.

BiologíaInglés
Publicado in Blasted Bioinformatics!?

Here’s a wee puzzle: A mature Open Data focused journal (“Journal A”), owned and launched by an company or Institute (“Institute B”), developed into the flagship of an Academic Publisher (“Publisher C”), runs their own properly archived and citable blog with DOIs etc (“Blog D”). If a briefly published editorial Blog Post (“Editorial E”) disappears from their Blog, could it be an accident, or something else?

CommunityResearch InfrastructureInformática y Ciencias de la InformaciónInglés
Publicado in Make Data Count
Autor Make Data Count

DOI: 10.60804/9qxx-bh58 Didier Torny is a Senior Researcher at CNRS, and the project lead for Matilda, a bibliographic platform built specifically for open science. We spoke with Didier about the project, and their plans to incorporate links to datasets for the articles they index in Matilda. The motivation for Matilda...

Informática y Ciencias de la InformaciónInglés
Publicado in Anil Madhavapeddy's feed
Autores Charlotte Wheeler, Felipe Begliomini, Amelia Holcomb, Srinivasan Keshav, Anil Madhavapeddy, David Coomes

Forest-focused Natural Climate Solutions (F-NCS) are crucial for climate change mitigation through emissions reductions and carbon sequestration. The Voluntary Carbon Market directs finance to F-NCS activities by the sale of carbon credits to offset emissions. However, inconsistent implementation and imprecise rules have led to over-crediting and other integrity challenges, reducing confidence in F-NCS effectiveness.

Informática y Ciencias de la InformaciónInglés
Publicado in Anil Madhavapeddy's feed
Autores Josh Millar, Ryan Gibb, Roy Ang, Hamed Haddadi, Anil Madhavapeddy

Physical spaces are increasingly dense with networked devices, promising seamless coordination and ambient intelligence. Yet today, cloud-first architectures force all communication through wide-area networks regardless of physical proximity. We lack an abstraction for spatial networking: using physical spaces to create boundaries for private, robust, and low-latency communication.