Michael Nelson - D-Lib Magazine Pioneered Web-Based Scholarly Communication - Invited Talk

Michael Nelson - D-Lib Magazine Pioneered Web-Based Scholarly Communication - Invited Talk

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) via YouTube Direct link

Conclusions

28 of 28

28 of 28

Conclusions

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Michael Nelson - D-Lib Magazine Pioneered Web-Based Scholarly Communication - Invited Talk

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  1. 1 D-Lib Magazine pioneered Web-based Scholarly Communication
  2. 2 Academic Information Should be Free
  3. 3 D-Lib Magazine's Most Prolific Contributors
  4. 4 Netlib: software via email
  5. 5 CORE: a variety of pre-Web hypertext systems
  6. 6 Anonymous FTP: the original institutional repository
  7. 7 NCSA Mosaic changed everything in 1993
  8. 8 NSF/DARPA/NASA Digital Libraries Initiative
  9. 9 Publishers Adopt Landing Page Paradigm
  10. 10 Scholarship is Still Not Web-Native
  11. 11 D-Lib Magazine as an Experiment
  12. 12 D-Lib Magazine's Peers: Ariadne
  13. 13 D-Lib Magazine's Peers: First Monday
  14. 14 265 issues & 1062 articles: Somewhere between a magazine and a journal
  15. 15 Innovations: HTML
  16. 16 Our Experimentations with D-Lib
  17. 17 Innovations: Open Access
  18. 18 Innovations: Persistent Content & Layout
  19. 19 Innovations: Persistent URLs
  20. 20 Innovations: Persistent Identifiers
  21. 21 Innovations: Metadata
  22. 22 Innovations: Mirror Sites
  23. 23 First Issue: Dublin Core
  24. 24 First Issue: DLI & DL12
  25. 25 First Issue: KWF & DOI
  26. 26 To the Editor
  27. 27 First Issue: What's needed in future research?
  28. 28 Conclusions

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