Bilgisayar ve Bilişim BilimleriİngilizceBlogger

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.
Ana SayfaAtom BeslemeMastodonISSN 2051-8188
language
MetadataOpen AcessBilgisayar ve Bilişim Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

One of my pet projects is to build a "Universal Article Reader" for the iPad (or similar mobile device), so that a reader can seemlessly move between articles from different publishers, follow up citations, and get more information on entities mentioned in those articles (e.g., species, molecules, localities, etc.). I've made various toys towards this, the latest being a HTML5 clone of Nature's iPhone app.One impediment to this is knowing

AndroidArticle 2.0DemoEPubFontsBilgisayar ve Bilişim Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

Over the last few months I've been exploring different ways to view scientific articles on the iPad, summarised here. I've also made a few prototypes, either from scratch (such as my response to the PLoS iPad app) or using Sencha Touch (see Touching citations on the iPad).Today, it's time for something a little different. The Sencha Touch framework I used earlier is huge and wasn't easy to get my head around.

BHLBHL-EuropeBIOONECiteBankDrupalBilgisayar ve Bilişim Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

This week saw the release of two tools from the Biodiversity Heritage Library, CiteBank and the BHL-Europe portal. Both have actually been quietly around for a while, but were only publicly announced last week.In developing a new tool there are several questions to ask. Does something already exist that meets my needs? If it doesn't exist, can I build it using an existing framework, or do I need to start from scratch?

Atlas Of Living AustraliaAustralian Faunal DirectoryBHLBioStorCouchDBBilgisayar ve Bilişim Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

Continuing my hobby horse of linking taxonomic databases to digitised literature, I've been working for the last couple of weeks on linking names in the Australian Faunal Directory (AFD) to articles in the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL). AFD is a list of all animals known to occur in Australia, and it provides much of the data for the recently released Atlas of Living Australia.

CouchDBLuceneBilgisayar ve Bilişim Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

Quick notes to self on fulltext search and CouchDB. Note that links to CouchDB are local to my machine(s),and won't work unless you are me, or have a copy of the same database running on your machine). CouchDB and Lucene adds fulltext indexing to CouchDB. After a few false starts I now have this working.

BHLCatalogue Of LifeMendeleyNamesTaxonomyBilgisayar ve Bilişim Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

David ("Paddy") Patterson, Jerry Cooper, Paul Kirk, Rich Pyle, and David Remsen have published an article in TREE entitled "Names are key to the big new biology" (doi:10.1016/j.tree.2010.09.004). The abstract states: Do we need names? Reading this (full disclosure, I was a reviewer) I can't wondering whether the assumption that names are key really needs to be challenged.

PLoSPLoS HubsBilgisayar ve Bilişim Bilimleriİngilizce
Yayınlandı

The PLoS Biodiversity Hub has launched today. There's a PLoS blog post explaining the background to the project, as well as a summary on the Hub itself:Readers of iPhylo may recall my account of one of the meetings involved in setting up this hub, in which I began to despair about the lack of readiness of biodiversity informatics to provide much of the information needed for projects such as hubs.