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Nature iPhone app clone in GitHub

One thing I'm increasingly conscious of is that I've a lot of demos and toy projects hanging around and the code for most of these isn't readily available. So, I plan to clean these up and put them in GitHub so others can explore the code, and reuse it if they see fit.

First up is the code to create a HTML+Javascript clone of Nature's iPhone app, as described in an earlier post.

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There's a live version of the clone here here. and the code is now available from GitHub at https://github.com/rdmpage/natureiphone.


Sherborn presentation on Open Taxonomy

Here is my presentation from today's Anchoring Biodiversity Information: From Sherborn to the 21st century and beyond meeting.


All the presentations will be posted online, along with podcasts of the audio. Meantime, presentations by Dave Remsen and Chris Freeland are already online.

Linking taxonomic names to literature: beyond digitised 5×3 index cards

Pubs
Tomorrow is the Anchoring Biodiversity Information: From Sherborn to the 21st century and beyond meeting. It should be an interesting gathering, albeit overshadowed by the sudden death of Frank Bisby.

I'm giving a talk entitled "Open Taxonomy", in which I argue that most taxonomic databases are little more than digitised collections of 5×3 index cards, where literature is treated as dumb citation strings rather than as resources with digital identifiers. To make the discussion concrete I've created a mapping between the Index to Organism Names (ION) database and a range of bibliographic sources, such as CrossRef (for DOIs), BioStor, JSTOR, etc.

This mapping is online at http://iphylo.org/~rpage/itaxon/.

So far I've managed to link some 200,000 animal names to a literature identifier, and a good fraction of these articles are freely available, either as images in BioStor and Gallica (for I've created a simple viewer) or as PDFs (which are displayed using Google Docs.

Some examples are:


The site is obviously a work in progress, and there's a lot to be done to the interface, but I hope it conveys the key point: a significant fraction of the primary taxonomic literature is online, and we should be linking to this. The days of digitised 5×3 index cards are past.