crossref.org
DOI display guidelines
http://www.crossref.org/02publishers/doi_display_guidelines.html
Member fees and rules. Free DOI name lookup. Free DOI name lookup. Free DOI name lookup. Crossref DOIs should always be displayed as permanent URLs in the online environment. Example http:/ dx.doi.org/10.1006/jmbi.1995.0238. Crossref recommends that Crossref DOIs be displayed in this form online wherever bibliographic information about a piece of content is displayed. Crossref DOIs must be displayed on members’ response pages (sometimes called landing pages). Metadata feeds to third parties. Crossref DOI...
kurtraschke.com
AppleScript – Kurt Raschke
https://kurtraschke.com/tag/applescript
Announcing htmlbib, a tool for rendering BibTeX files as interactive HTML. For some time now, I’ve been working on an annotated bibliography of articles on various topics in transportation (particularly the history of automatic fare collection from 1960 to the present, as well as the SelTrac train control system and its origins in Germany). I’ve been compiling the information using BibDesk. And I’d like to be able to share it with a wider audience, in the hope that it might be useful to someone. So that ...
search.crossref.org
Crossref Metadata Search
http://search.crossref.org/help/search
Find your own works by searching for your name and something else, such as part of a title. Discover new articles by searching for query terms. Put a in front of a query term to force it to appear in search results (or a! Find a particular work by searching for its DOI. Find a particular work by searching for its short DOI. Find works related to an ORCID. Find articles within a journal by searching for an ISSN. Find works funded by a particular grant by searching for the grant / award number.
doi.org
Digital Object Identifier System FAQs
http://www.doi.org/faq.html
Frequently Asked Questions about the DOI. These "Frequently Asked Questions" about the DOI system and DOI. Names are not meant to take the place of the fuller information available in the DOI Handbook. Where possible, we provide pointers to the relevant section of the handbook. If you have a question that you think should be added to this list, or is not satisfactorily answered, please feel free to contact us at contact@doi.org. See also the DOI Handbook, Glossary of Terms. The cost of registering new DO...
doi.org
Digital Object Identifier System Resources
http://www.doi.org/resources.html
Learn About Using DOIs. DOI Proxy User Documentation. Are the primary sources of information about the DOI system. The DOI Handbook explains the history, the fundamentals, the policies and the technology behind the system. The factsheets summarize key issues, and explain how DOI names and the DOI system relates to other identifier schemes, and other specifications and technologies. Some additional resources are listed below. Learn About Using DOIs. Watch a video and download a brochure. Shows some of the...
gthorisson.name
Paper just out, on ORCID and collective action
http://gthorisson.name/2011/11/29/paper-just-out-on-orcid-and-collective-action
Gudmundur 'Mummi' Thorisson. A journeyman s perspective on research in an online world. Paper just out, on ORCID and collective action. November 29th, 2011. This paper came out earlier in the month. The piece was mainly authored by Martin Fenner. Who heads the ORCID Outreach Working Group. That I am a member of, but I and another OWG member helped out a little. It’s nice and short, and open-access too. So just click the nice super-short DOI. URL below to get it and start reading! Fenner, M. ORCID:.
gthorisson.name
Paper just out, on ORCID and collective action
http://gthorisson.name/blog/2011/11/29/paper-just-out-on-orcid-and-collective-action
Gudmundur 'Mummi' Thorisson. A journeyman s perspective on research in an online world. Paper just out, on ORCID and collective action. November 29th, 2011. This paper came out earlier in the month. The piece was mainly authored by Martin Fenner. Who heads the ORCID Outreach Working Group. That I am a member of, but I and another OWG member helped out a little. It’s nice and short, and open-access too. So just click the nice super-short DOI. URL below to get it and start reading! Fenner, M. ORCID:.
blog.mckuhn.de
bioCS: February 2011
http://blog.mckuhn.de/2011_02_01_archive.html
Biology as computational science. Wednesday, February 23, 2011. A bookmarklet for shortDOI.org. Is a URL shortening service that takes DOIs and converts them to short URLs such as http:/ doi.org/bb6. Else{location.href='http:/ shortdoi.org/' d} }" shortDOI. It will try to find the DOI in the current page and direct you to shortDOI. Update 24.02.2011:. Use some majority voting to find the right DOI. Update 01.03.2011:. Update 29.07.2015:. Posted by Michael Kuhn. Monday, February 21, 2011. Of cost per mega...