On May 6, 2009, at 8:24 PM, Andrew M. C. Dawes wrote:

Somewhat off topic, but I'm curious if anyone knows of a solution or
service that would allow me to essentially serve my bibdesk (i.e.,
bibtex) database via the web. The goal is to make my collection of
papers and references (90% have a PDF associated with them) available
to my research students so they can browse/read/print as they need to.
[...]
Ideally, I'd like something like a web interface to the bibtex file
that can also link to the PDF file.

You could use BibDesk's Bonjour sharing if your students are on the same network (and using BibDesk), and you might even be able to set up file links to a server.

Paul Ingraham has a web interface [1] which I believe is a php front end to a BibTeX database. James Owen has a page [2] that I think was generated using BibDesk's templating system [3]; in fact, his templates seem to be in an old post to macosx-tex [4]. Refbase [5] might be another option, but would probably have more setup overhead.

[1] http://SaveYourself.ca/bibliography.php
[2] http://homepage.mac.com/jhgowen/research/publications.html
[3] http://apps.sourceforge.net/mediawiki/bibdesk/index.php?title=Templates
[4] http://www.tug.org/pipermail/macostex-archives/2006-May/022437.html
[5] http://www.refbase.net/index.php/Web_Reference_Database



Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NEW KODAK i700 Series Scanners deliver under ANY circumstances! Your
production scanning environment may not be a perfect world - but thanks to
Kodak, there's a perfect scanner to get the job done! With the NEW KODAK i700
Series Scanner you'll get full speed at 300 dpi even with all image 
processing features enabled. http://p.sf.net/sfu/kodak-com
_______________________________________________
Bibdesk-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bibdesk-users

Reply via email to