About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 24. Chapters: Free dictionary software, Free institutional repository software, Free reference management software, DPubS, BRICKS, Zotero, Koha, Citavi, Evergreen, WizFolio, DSpace, Fedora, Greenstone, Qiqqa, NewGenLib, Lingoes, Mendeley, Digital Repository Audit Method Based on Risk Assessment, Connotea, EPrints, FREELANG Dictionary, StarDict, GoldenDict, Aigaion, Comparison of DEX software, BibDesk, JabRef, VuFind, PhpMyBibli, Museolog, RefDB, Gnome-dictionary, Omeka, OpenBiblio, SeerSuite, Refbase, Referencer, Invenio, DEX for Android, Pybliographer, Wikindx, Sdcv, Bibus, Fantasdic, FreeDict, MDic, Marcion. Excerpt: DPubS (Digital Publishing System), developed by Cornell University Library and Penn State University Libraries, is an open access publication management software. DPubS arose out of Cornell's experience in developing Project Euclid, "an online publishing platform for math and statistical journals." DPubS is being offered for free in order to enable to "change scholarly publishing by giving academic libraries and their partners the means to organize and disseminate scholarly communications electronically." Cornell University Library's early involvement in publishing ventures dates back to the 1980s. In partnership with the Xerox Corporation and the Commission on Preservation and Access, Cornell developed an early digital imaging project to preserve books in a fragile condition. Initially focused upon republishing mathematics titles, this ongoing effort has expanded to include several projects, including the Core Historical Literature of Agriculture, Home Economics Archive: Research Tradition, History (HEARTH), and the Making of America. Additionally, Cornell University Library has established a Digital Consulting and Production Services (DCAPS) division, "a team of experts to plan, create, organize, and archive imag...