Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: access to journals

2013-09-27 Thread Abhijeet Safai
Thanks Rob for the link.
It is excellent idea.
Thanks once again.

--
Abhijeet Safai


On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 12:27 AM, Rob gamali...@gmail.com wrote:

 For editors who just need an specific article or two they can't find:

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Resource_Exchange/Resource_Request
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: access to journals

2013-09-25 Thread Matthew Roth
To echo Phoebe and Tom:

I paid $250 for a lifetime alumni card at Berkeley, not because I attended,
but because the girl I was dating at the time was an alumna (she got free
lifetime access). Seriously, access to all their libraries for $250 for
life seemed great, especially with the interlibrary loan program that
enables me to get pretty much any book I want in the entire state
university system.

Then I move to San Francisco and found the SF Public Library gives me
pretty much the same access to databases and books and all of it for $0.00.
Now I want my $250 back ;)

-Matthew


On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 8:40 AM, phoebe ayers phoebe.w...@gmail.com wrote:

 In the U.S. I encourage people to check out what database subscriptions
 their local public library offers -- many larger public libraries offer a
 surprising number of online journals  databases that are available to
 anyone who has a library card, which you can generally get for free if you
 live in the library's area (and sometimes for pay if you *don't* live in a
 library's area -- especially if you are nearby). Additionally, some states
 offer state-wide consortia deals on databases and subscriptions, so even
 small public libraries have access to a wide range of materials. Also, if
 you are close to a public university of some sort, the vast majority offer
 on-site access to their online resources if you are physically on campus.

 We do not, to my knowledge, have a national library program like what Liam
 describes, but people in other countries should check and see if they do.

 Standing offer: If you email me offlist, I will help you try to figure out
 what library resources you might have access to :)

 best,
 Phoebe

 On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 6:06 AM, Liam Wyatt liamwy...@gmail.com wrote:

  With regards to getting access to closed journals...
  I'm now working for the National Library of Australia and we offer free,
 at
  home, access to JSTOR and MANY other restricted access databases to any
  Australian, if they get a free library card.
  [You can see the full list at the NLA eResources page:
  http://www.nla.gov.au
  /app/eresources/ ]
 
  Is this unique to Australia? I must admit that I didn't realise until
  recently the extent of the restricted databases that were available for
  free to library card holders in their own home. With all the discussion
  over the years on the global Wikimedia mailing lists about trying to
  special access for Wikimedians, I had just assumed it was a global issue.
  But, at least for Australians, it's largely solved... Are other country's
  major libraries offering journal access to the public for free? If not,
  perhaps rather than trying to get special access for Wikimedians directly
  from the Database companies, we should be working to get access via
 Library
  subscriptions?
 
  Liam / Wittylama.
 
  [p.s. yes - I realise I'm promoting a service offered by my employer,
  sorry. But I reckon it's relevant and important that people know though.
  p.p.s. If you are Australian and want a free library card sent to you -
 go
  here: http://www.nla.gov.au/getalibrarycard/ ]
 
  wittylama.com
  Peace, love  metadata
 
 
  On 24 September 2013 12:48, Andrea Zanni zanni.andre...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 
   It's probably worth mentioning (again) that
   we started a brand new wikimedia mailing list about Open Access:
   https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/openaccess
  
   If you are interested in the topic of access to scientific/academic
   literature, you should be there.
   Getting access to closed journals is definetely something that we
 like
   and must pursue,
   but changing the very system of is more important.
   We shouldn't have this issue at all :-)
  
   Aubrey
  
  
  
  
  
  
   On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 2:18 PM, Tom Morris t...@tommorris.org wrote:
  
If you've gone to university, it's well worth looking to see if your
university provide alumni access.
   
My university, the University of London, provide alumni access to the
library for £220 a year, which includes an eight book borrowing
 limit,
   full
JSTOR access (which doesn't have the limitation that JPASS has),
 Oxford
   DNB
access and some other online resources.
   
Some universities also charge the even better price of nothing.
   
I've put up a page in project space on English Wikipedia so we can
document which institutions provide access:
   
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:JSTOR/Alumni_access
   
--
Tom Morris
http://tommorris.org/
   
On 24 September 2013 at 12:56:18, David Gerard (dger...@gmail.com)
   wrote:
   
fyi
   
   
-- Forwarded message --
From: Kathleen McCook klmcc...@gmail.com
Date: 24 September 2013 12:25
Subject: [WikiEN-l] access to journals
To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
   
   
In an effort to enhance access options for people who aren’t
affiliated with universities, colleges, or 

Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: access to journals

2013-09-25 Thread Rob
For editors who just need an specific article or two they can't find:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Resource_Exchange/Resource_Request
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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: access to journals

2013-09-24 Thread Tom Morris
If you've gone to university, it's well worth looking to see if your university 
provide alumni access.

My university, the University of London, provide alumni access to the library 
for £220 a year, which includes an eight book borrowing limit, full JSTOR 
access (which doesn't have the limitation that JPASS has), Oxford DNB access 
and some other online resources.

Some universities also charge the even better price of nothing.

I've put up a page in project space on English Wikipedia so we can document 
which institutions provide access:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:JSTOR/Alumni_access

--
Tom Morris
http://tommorris.org/

On 24 September 2013 at 12:56:18, David Gerard (dger...@gmail.com) wrote:

fyi


-- Forwarded message --
From: Kathleen McCook klmcc...@gmail.com
Date: 24 September 2013 12:25
Subject: [WikiEN-l] access to journals
To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org


In an effort to enhance access options for people who aren’t
affiliated with universities, colleges, or high schools,
not-for-profit digital library JSTOR has launched JPASS, a new program
offering individual users access to 1,500 journals from JSTOR’s
archive collection. The move follows the March 2012 launch of JSTOR’s
Register  Readprogram, which allowed independent researchers to
register for a free MyJSTOR account, and receive free, online-only
access to three full-text articles every 14 days. That service has
since attracted almost one million users including independent
scholars, writers, business people, adjunct faculty, and others, and
JSTOR plans to continue offering the service in its current form.
However, in a recent survey, many of Register  Read users expressed
interest in an individual subscription model that would offer enhanced
access, encouraging JSTOR to move ahead with JPASS.



http://www.thedigitalshift.com/2013/09/digital-libraries/jstor-launches-jpass-access-accounts-for-individual-researchers/
JSTOR Launches JPASS Access Accounts for Individual Researchers
[Library Journal]

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: access to journals

2013-09-24 Thread Federico Leva (Nemo)

Tom Morris, 24/09/2013 14:18:

If you've gone to university, it's well worth looking to see if your university 
provide alumni access.


Speaking of which, if you find out how many FTE the university pays for 
the alumni, I'd be interested in knowing (at least some departments in 
my university would like to introduce such a program but negotiations 
with publishers are so complex).


Nemo

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Re: [WikiEN-l] [Wikimedia-l] Fwd: access to journals

2013-09-24 Thread phoebe ayers
In the U.S. I encourage people to check out what database subscriptions
their local public library offers -- many larger public libraries offer a
surprising number of online journals  databases that are available to
anyone who has a library card, which you can generally get for free if you
live in the library's area (and sometimes for pay if you *don't* live in a
library's area -- especially if you are nearby). Additionally, some states
offer state-wide consortia deals on databases and subscriptions, so even
small public libraries have access to a wide range of materials. Also, if
you are close to a public university of some sort, the vast majority offer
on-site access to their online resources if you are physically on campus.

We do not, to my knowledge, have a national library program like what Liam
describes, but people in other countries should check and see if they do.

Standing offer: If you email me offlist, I will help you try to figure out
what library resources you might have access to :)

best,
Phoebe

On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 6:06 AM, Liam Wyatt liamwy...@gmail.com wrote:

 With regards to getting access to closed journals...
 I'm now working for the National Library of Australia and we offer free, at
 home, access to JSTOR and MANY other restricted access databases to any
 Australian, if they get a free library card.
 [You can see the full list at the NLA eResources page:
 http://www.nla.gov.au
 /app/eresources/ ]

 Is this unique to Australia? I must admit that I didn't realise until
 recently the extent of the restricted databases that were available for
 free to library card holders in their own home. With all the discussion
 over the years on the global Wikimedia mailing lists about trying to
 special access for Wikimedians, I had just assumed it was a global issue.
 But, at least for Australians, it's largely solved... Are other country's
 major libraries offering journal access to the public for free? If not,
 perhaps rather than trying to get special access for Wikimedians directly
 from the Database companies, we should be working to get access via Library
 subscriptions?

 Liam / Wittylama.

 [p.s. yes - I realise I'm promoting a service offered by my employer,
 sorry. But I reckon it's relevant and important that people know though.
 p.p.s. If you are Australian and want a free library card sent to you - go
 here: http://www.nla.gov.au/getalibrarycard/ ]

 wittylama.com
 Peace, love  metadata


 On 24 September 2013 12:48, Andrea Zanni zanni.andre...@gmail.com wrote:

  It's probably worth mentioning (again) that
  we started a brand new wikimedia mailing list about Open Access:
  https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/openaccess
 
  If you are interested in the topic of access to scientific/academic
  literature, you should be there.
  Getting access to closed journals is definetely something that we like
  and must pursue,
  but changing the very system of is more important.
  We shouldn't have this issue at all :-)
 
  Aubrey
 
 
 
 
 
 
  On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 2:18 PM, Tom Morris t...@tommorris.org wrote:
 
   If you've gone to university, it's well worth looking to see if your
   university provide alumni access.
  
   My university, the University of London, provide alumni access to the
   library for £220 a year, which includes an eight book borrowing limit,
  full
   JSTOR access (which doesn't have the limitation that JPASS has), Oxford
  DNB
   access and some other online resources.
  
   Some universities also charge the even better price of nothing.
  
   I've put up a page in project space on English Wikipedia so we can
   document which institutions provide access:
  
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:JSTOR/Alumni_access
  
   --
   Tom Morris
   http://tommorris.org/
  
   On 24 September 2013 at 12:56:18, David Gerard (dger...@gmail.com)
  wrote:
  
   fyi
  
  
   -- Forwarded message --
   From: Kathleen McCook klmcc...@gmail.com
   Date: 24 September 2013 12:25
   Subject: [WikiEN-l] access to journals
   To: English Wikipedia wikien-l@lists.wikimedia.org
  
  
   In an effort to enhance access options for people who aren’t
   affiliated with universities, colleges, or high schools,
   not-for-profit digital library JSTOR has launched JPASS, a new program
   offering individual users access to 1,500 journals from JSTOR’s
   archive collection. The move follows the March 2012 launch of JSTOR’s
   Register  Readprogram, which allowed independent researchers to
   register for a free MyJSTOR account, and receive free, online-only
   access to three full-text articles every 14 days. That service has
   since attracted almost one million users including independent
   scholars, writers, business people, adjunct faculty, and others, and
   JSTOR plans to continue offering the service in its current form.
   However, in a recent survey, many of Register  Read users expressed
   interest in an individual subscription model that would offer