921 Matching Annotations
  1. Oct 2020
    1. ¿ Rápido o apresurado? El acceso abierto NO debería ser una excepción Tres lecciones para la publicación abierta Si el acceso abierto es fundamental para ayudar a derrotar a COVID-19, ¿por qué no utilizar la misma lógica para abordar todos los demás desafíos que enfrentamos?

      Lección 1: Los modelos de publicación tradicionales, que bloquean el contenido detrás de los muros de pago, no son adecuados para su propósito. Lección 2: Los preprints y las plataformas de publicación abiertas han alcanzado la mayoría de edad Lección 3: No podemos predecir qué investigación será útil, así que hagamos que todo sea de acceso abierto.

      Robert Kiley. (2020). Three lessons COVID-19 has taught us about Open Access publishing. Retrieved 13 October 2020, from https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2020/10/06/39677/

  2. Sep 2020
    1. If you would like to delete your account, please email us at support@hypothes.is

      This reminds me of closed systems, pretty much the opposite of what Dan Whaley (Founder, CEO of Hypothes.is) is talking about here:

      https://youtu.be/RYjOfTv0Tjs?t=603

    1. to download this information for your records or for use elsewhere, this is possible through the Hypothesis API

      Why don't you provide a straightforward way to download the annotation data from the user's account?

    1. through the window, to take his portmanteau

      How close were Wilkie Collins and Lewis Carroll? If I'm not mistaken, Carroll originally used this phrase in Through the Looking Glass which was published around the same time as The Moonstone.

      As Humpty Dumpty says, the portmanteau could be interpreted as "two meanings packed up into one word" . With Godfrey giving Cuff the keys to the portmanteau, it may allude to clues hidden in words with double meanings.

      Either way, Carroll and Collins must've been on a lot of the good stuff.

    2. The Colonel had been a notorious opium-eater for years past

      It should be mentioned that Wilkie Collins was a "notorious opium-eater" himself. The Colonel may be an allusion to himself, and the negative way in which he is depicted could be interpreted as Collins' self-loathing.

      The curse of the Diamond itself may be an allegory for the corrupting influence of opium addiction. The "wretched crystal" that he "picked up" in India can be construed as a metaphor for a bad drug habit.

    1. Siemieniuk, R. A., Bartoszko, J. J., Ge, L., Zeraatkar, D., Izcovich, A., Kum, E., Pardo-Hernandez, H., Rochwerg, B., Lamontagne, F., Han, M. A., Liu, Q., Agarwal, A., Agoritsas, T., Chu, D. K., Couban, R., Darzi, A., Devji, T., Fang, B., Fang, C., … Brignardello-Petersen, R. (2020). Drug treatments for covid-19: Living systematic review and network meta-analysis. BMJ, 370. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m2980

  3. Aug 2020
    1. Create a note by selecting some text and clicking the button

      This is a note in hypothes.is

  4. Jul 2020
  5. Jun 2020