Springer offers personal copies of their e-books for ~$25

More than 15,000 books included at $24.95/24,95 euros each

The MyCopy offer is cur­rently valid on more than 15,000 elec­tronic Springer books pub­lished since 2005. The new soft cover edi­tion is branded as a MyCopy book with a color cover and black and white book content.
 
 

All books will be sold at the same price, $24.95 for cus­tomers in the US and Canada or 24,95 euros in Europe. Each price includes ship­ping and han­dling. Local VAT will be added.

 
 

MyCopy books can only be ordered by reg­is­tered patrons of aca­d­e­mic libraries that have pur­chased the cor­re­spond­ing eBook Col­lec­tion. The entire order­ing and ship­ping process will be han­dled by Springer in coop­er­a­tion with a print-on-demand (POD) provider.”

Prince­ton Uni­ver­sity sub­scribes to most of Springer’s ebook packages.

Source: a Springeralerts email, June

Journal Citation data released for 2009

Jour­nal Cita­tion Reports (JCR) now has 10 years of jour­nal met­rics available:

Jour­nal Cita­tion Reports  (1999+)  (Sci­ence & Social Sci­ence Editions.)

From Infor­ma­tion ser­vices provider Thom­son Reuters, US, “JCR claims to be the most widely used tool for assess­ing the world’s lead­ing jour­nals. The met­rics it offers, includ­ing Jour­nal Impact Fac­tor, empower users to objec­tively eval­u­ate a journal’s per­for­mance and its influ­ence on research glob­ally.”  JCR ranks 9100 jour­nals from 2200 pub­lish­ers in 78 countries.

Source:  Knowl­edge­s­peak Newslet­ter, June 18, 2010

 

WorldWideScience.org Goes Multilingual

“WorldWideScience.org Goes Multilingual
 
OAK RIDGE, TN — Now you can find non-English sci­en­tific lit­er­a­ture from data­bases in China, Rus­sia, France, and sev­eral Latin Amer­i­can coun­tries and have your search results trans­lated into one of nine lan­guages. With the beta launch today of Mul­ti­lin­gual WorldWideScience.org, real-time search­ing and trans­la­tion of globally-dispersed col­lec­tions of sci­en­tific lit­er­a­ture is pos­si­ble. This new capa­bil­ity is the result of an inter­na­tional public-private part­ner­ship between the WorldWideScience.org Alliance and Microsoft Research, whose trans­la­tion tech­nol­ogy has been paired with the fed­er­ated search­ing tech­nol­ogy of Deep Web Technologies.
 
Microsoft Research Cor­po­rate Vice-President Tony Hey said, “We are extremely pleased to have our Microsoft Trans­la­tor tech­nol­ogy used with World­WideScience. Built at Microsoft Research, this trans­la­tion tech­nol­ogy already pro­vides trans­la­tions to mil­lions of users. Part­ner­ing with World­WideScience is an oppor­tu­nity to advance sci­ence across lan­guage bar­ri­ers and improve sci­en­tific discovery.”
 
While a large share of sci­en­tific lit­er­a­ture is pub­lished in Eng­lish, vast quan­ti­ties of high-quality sci­ence are recorded in lan­guages where the research is per­formed, and the pace of non-English sci­en­tific pub­lish­ing is increas­ing. Mul­ti­lin­gual WorldWideScience.orgBETA will ben­e­fit the English-speaking sci­ence com­mu­nity, enabling search­ing and trans­la­tion of non-English sources. It will also ben­e­fit native speak­ers of other major lan­guages (Chi­nese, French, Ger­man, Japan­ese, Korean, Por­tuguese, Span­ish, and Russ­ian) by trans­lat­ing search results into the user’s lan­guage of choice. More lan­guages will be added in the com­ing months.
 
Mul­ti­lin­gual WorldWideScience.orgBETA was offi­cially launched at the Inter­na­tional Coun­cil for Sci­en­tific and Tech­ni­cal Infor­ma­tion (ICSTI) annual con­fer­ence held in Helsinki, Finland.
 
Dr. Wal­ter War­nick, Direc­tor of the U.S. Depart­ment of Energy Office of Sci­en­tific and Tech­ni­cal Infor­ma­tion within the Office of Sci­ence, empha­sized both the “open gov­ern­ment” aspects and the poten­tial for accel­er­at­ing sci­en­tific dis­cov­ery with the addi­tion of mul­ti­lin­gual trans­la­tions across nationally-sponsored R&D results and other sci­ence. OSTI serves as oper­at­ing agent for WorldWideScience.org. World­WideScience Alliance Chair­man, Richard Boul­der­stone from the British Library, noted that WorldWideScience.org has become “the world’s most impor­tant sci­en­tific resource, where the global sci­ence com­mu­nity can share knowledge.”
 
About World­WideScience

WorldWideScience.org was for­mally launched in 2007 with fed­er­ated search­ing of 12 data­bases in 10 coun­tries. Through early 2010, it had grown to search national sci­en­tific data­bases in 65 coun­tries, cov­er­ing some 400 mil­lion pages of sci­ence. In addi­tion to other World­WideScience Alliance mem­bers, key part­ner orga­ni­za­tions tak­ing part in the cer­e­mony included the Russ­ian Acad­emy of Sci­ences, the Chi­nese Min­istry of Sci­ence and Tech­nol­ogy (Insti­tute of Sci­en­tific and Tech­ni­cal Infor­ma­tion of China), and ICSTI.”

Source:

Tim Byrne
DOE/Office of Sci­en­tific and Tech­ni­cal Infor­ma­tion
P.O. Box 62
Oak Ridge,TN 37831
Phone: 865–241-2358
E-mail: