Friday, February 27, 2009

Mendeley Snags $2 Million In Early-Stage Funding For Research Paper Management Tool

 

Mendeley Snags $2 Million In Early-Stage Funding For Research Paper Management Tool

 

by Robin Wauters on February 25, 2009

Mendeley, makers of a desktop and web application designed to make it easier for academics to manage and discover relevant research papers on any topic, has raised $2 million in early-stage funding from some high-profile investors, including Stefan Glänzer, early seed investor in and former Chairman of Last.fm, former Executive VP of Digital Strategy and Business Development for Warner Music Group Alex Zubillaga and ASI, the investment vehicle of Skype’s former founding engineers.

The connection with the popular social music network Last.fm doesn’t stop there, since the company is pushing to become the “Last.fm for research”, which means the startup essentially aims to enable academics to manage and sharing their research paper inventory and at the same time discover like-minded people and papers thanks to a recommendation and matching algorithm.

I registered for the service and downloaded the Windows version of the desktop app (it’s available for Mac OSX and Linux too) to give it a whirl. First thing I noticed is that you can easily invite fellow academics from your network to join Mendeley based on existing accounts for LinkedIn, Gmail, Windows Live, etc. I also took note of the fact that your profile settings, which include information about your field of research, a CV, etc. automatically has you signed up for the company newsletter, which I think should be optional. My entirely fake public profile can be located here.

The desktop app is actually quite nice: after installation, you can import PDF files using the tool’s “Automatic Medata Extraction” or import your existing library from EndNote XML, BibTeX or RIS files. Mendeley also features a Word Plugin which lets you insert citations and create formatted bibliographies in documents using Microsoft Word 2003/2007. Academics can also upload their own research papers and syncing files and information with the web-based version with just one click of the mouse. Mendeley also boasts features that let members connect with their peers online, and - taking a page from Facebook - the tool also features a newsfeed that displays newly shared or uploaded documents etc.

Mendeley claims to have “scrobbled” data on almost 3 million research papers in just two months, so it’s likely to become one hell of a resource if growth continues and enough academics take notice.

Similar services include Labmeeting (which we likened to a “social network for scientists”), Academia.edu (which we likened to a “Geni for researchers”) and Questia.

If you know of any others, please share in comments.

Others: 

Another company that is related here is Biowizard. While it does not work within the context of a research paper for footnoting, there are a lot of Digg-like social features to help find the best and most relevant research. More importantly, it also includes proprietary data on research presented at conferences, which is usually 1-2 years ahead of when it gets formally published. As such, it is the only place to stay up to date on the most current happenings in biomedical research.

A non-software and download alternative is twidox. Focus is on documents rather than the social-networking and now has over 30.000 already.

scholarz.net which is also a German concept by the way.

For computer science, Eventseer (http://eventseer.net) provides an alternative take on social networking for researchers. We mine the web for existing relations between scientists and use the information to help users find upcoming conferences and events that are relevant for them, or even other researchers that they might be interested in following.

CiteULike is similar; it’s a website that allows the building of collaborative bibliographies.

Since we’re talking about Mendeley, it is also worth mentioning Papers, which attempts to be the iTunes of reference managers rather than the Last.fm. I’m using this at the moment, but it’s not without its problems, so I’m always looking for alternatives.

Other reference managers worthy of note are connotea (http://www.connotea.org/) and Zotero (http://www.zotero.org/).

A related type of program is a research collaboration system. Laboratree (http://www.laboratree.org) is a system facilitates collaboration within and between organizations.

wePapers and Zotero

ResearchGate.net, fast growing social network for scientists, strong especially life sciences.

Basecamp/ Backpack for scientists, then Lab Engine (http://www.labenginehq.com) might be of interest to you

research grant application to Grants.gov (for the federal dollars). Check out Cayuse and Subawards.com.

 

Mendeley Snags $2 Million In Early-Stage Funding For Research Paper Management Tool

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Free online file conversion

File conversion sites -- HSM

Zamzar - Free online file conversion-- Zamzar - Free online file conversion

Online MIDI to MP3/WAV Converter -- http://www.hamienet.com/midi2mp3

Some websites, some software

SUPER: http://www.erightsoft.net/SUPER.html
Total Converter: http://total-converter.reviewstown.com
media-convert: http://media-convert.com

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Zotero Blog » Blog Archive » Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

 Zotero Blog » Blog Archive » Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

Posted February 23rd, 2009 by Trevor

We are excited to announce two major releases. This morning the Zotero team launched both Zotero 1.5 and the first release of Zotero’s web application. Watch the screencast below for details on 1.5 and see the list below for a brief list of Zotero’s new features.

Zotero Blog » Blog Archive » Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

Monday, February 23, 2009

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect 

Be the First to Know

Web Page Monitoring Services

for tracking pages without RSS feeds...

ChangeDetect is a FREE service that saves your favorite web pages, monitors content for changes and sends an automatic email notification to you whenever your web pages are updated.  Sign up now.

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect

Test Scribd

 

Customizing Endnote to Use the SFX OpenURL Link Resolver

Friday, February 20, 2009

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

More things to look at.....HSM

Library a’ la Cartehttp://alacarte.library.oregonstate.edu/ a content management system designed for creating and maintaining library research guides
Drupal - http://drupal.org/ a content management system
Moodlehttp://moodle.org/ a course management system used by many colleges and universities

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

Thomas B. Fordham Institute -

Thomas B. Fordham Institute - 

The Mad, Mad World of Textbook Adoption

September 29, 2004

by Chester E. Finn, Jr., Diane Ravitch

Statewide textbook adoption, the process by which 21 states dictate the textbooks that schools and districts can use, is fundamentally flawed. Textbook adoption distorts the market, entices extremist groups to hijack the curriculum, enriches the textbook cartel, and papers the land with mediocre instructional materials that cannot fulfill their important education mission. The adoption process cannot be set right by tinkering with it, concludes The Mad, Mad World of Textbook Adoption, the latest release from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. Rather, legislators and governors in adoption states should eliminate the process and devolve funding for and decisions about textbook purchases to individual schools, individual districts, even individual teachers.
The Mad, Mad World of Textbook Adoption is the first of a new Fordham Institute series, "Compact Guides to Education Solutions," that provides practical solutions to K-12 education problems for policy makers, legislators, school leaders, and activists. These concise guides are meant to help drive reforms at the local, state, and national levels by offering actionable policy recommendations.

Thomas B. Fordham Institute -