Das World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) und das International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF) kündigten an, die von ihnen koordinierten, weltweiten Webstandards mehr aufeinander abzustimmen.
Das World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) und das International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF) kündigten an, die von ihnen koordinierten, weltweiten Webstandards mehr aufeinander abzustimmen.
The release of the ENCODE (ENCyclopedia Of DNA Element) project has generated much discussion (see Fighting about ENCODE and junk). Perhaps perversely, I'm more interested in the way Nature has packaged the information than the debate about how much of our DNA is "junk." Nature has a website (http://www.nature.com/encode/) that demonstrates the use of "threads" to navigate through a set of papers.
Over the last few months I've been exploring different ways to view scientific articles on the iPad, summarised here. I've also made a few prototypes, either from scratch (such as my response to the PLoS iPad app) or using Sencha Touch (see Touching citations on the iPad). Today, it's time for something a little different. The Sencha Touch framework I used earlier is huge and wasn't easy to get my head around.
There are a growing number of applications for viewing scientific articles coming out for the iPhone and iPad. I'm toying with extending the experiments described in an earlier post when I took the PLoS iPad app to task for being essentially a PDF page-turner, so I thought I should take a more detailed look at the currently available apps.