We have explored whether the GDPR's right to data portability might help in this regard: https://tnhh.org/research/pubs/wraps2021.pdf Of course this will only work in some jurisdictions, and even then it needs stronger…
Fair enough. It does work for my simple use case: rsync student coursework to the remarkable, mark coursework on the remarkable, rsync back. There aren't many small file changes and USB is fast enough. The real…
As others have pointed out, that doesn't quite work. But the way that I use rsync with my remarkable is to use sshfs to mount the remarkable's filesystem, and then run rsync between the local and mounted filesystems.…
I am also a CUL refugee who is using JabRef after trying Zotero. Would be interested to know if there are any other options.
I had my Masters students do this as part of my wireless networking class this year. It was very instructive for me and the students seemed to enjoy it, so I'll definitely keep it in the syllabus.
Peer review is a relatively new aspect of science: the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society started systematic peer review in the mid-19th century…
Unfortunately not everyone reports this information. Here is a study that we did of over 500 papers using online social network data: http://tnhh.org/research/pubs/tetc2015.pdf While most authors would report high-level…
The article's description of a DOI is a bit vague. It isn't just a link. When you register a DOI, you have to register the metadata, which are then stored with your DOI registration agency (like crossref or datacite).…
http://www.docracy.com/tos/changes is also good for tracking changes. And today I saw a talk about http://commonterms.org/ which could be useful if widely implemented.
Some venues are doing this, e.g. f1000. Here's a paper that I reviewed: http://f1000research.com/articles/3-38/v2
I ask my students to read this: http://ccr.sigcomm.org/online/files/p83-keshavA.pdf
In this case, I think you want to be using unison rather than rsync.
Simply providing the ability to upload data only solves a small part of the problem. We run the CRAWDAD wireless network data archive (http://crawdad.org/) and the hardest parts are: convincing people to share data;…
Nice concept. But if I search for "Scotland" I am offered the Shetlands (close-ish), Rutland Vermont, Syria, Estonia or Mexico.
This URL was hiding in the source: http://viewer.zmags.com/services/DownloadPDF?publicationID=6...
We have explored whether the GDPR's right to data portability might help in this regard: https://tnhh.org/research/pubs/wraps2021.pdf Of course this will only work in some jurisdictions, and even then it needs stronger…
Fair enough. It does work for my simple use case: rsync student coursework to the remarkable, mark coursework on the remarkable, rsync back. There aren't many small file changes and USB is fast enough. The real…
As others have pointed out, that doesn't quite work. But the way that I use rsync with my remarkable is to use sshfs to mount the remarkable's filesystem, and then run rsync between the local and mounted filesystems.…
I am also a CUL refugee who is using JabRef after trying Zotero. Would be interested to know if there are any other options.
I had my Masters students do this as part of my wireless networking class this year. It was very instructive for me and the students seemed to enjoy it, so I'll definitely keep it in the syllabus.
Peer review is a relatively new aspect of science: the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society started systematic peer review in the mid-19th century…
Unfortunately not everyone reports this information. Here is a study that we did of over 500 papers using online social network data: http://tnhh.org/research/pubs/tetc2015.pdf While most authors would report high-level…
The article's description of a DOI is a bit vague. It isn't just a link. When you register a DOI, you have to register the metadata, which are then stored with your DOI registration agency (like crossref or datacite).…
http://www.docracy.com/tos/changes is also good for tracking changes. And today I saw a talk about http://commonterms.org/ which could be useful if widely implemented.
Some venues are doing this, e.g. f1000. Here's a paper that I reviewed: http://f1000research.com/articles/3-38/v2
I ask my students to read this: http://ccr.sigcomm.org/online/files/p83-keshavA.pdf
In this case, I think you want to be using unison rather than rsync.
Simply providing the ability to upload data only solves a small part of the problem. We run the CRAWDAD wireless network data archive (http://crawdad.org/) and the hardest parts are: convincing people to share data;…
Nice concept. But if I search for "Scotland" I am offered the Shetlands (close-ish), Rutland Vermont, Syria, Estonia or Mexico.
This URL was hiding in the source: http://viewer.zmags.com/services/DownloadPDF?publicationID=6...