23 Matching Annotations
  1. Last 7 days
    1. Publish with Purdue e-Pubs Purdue Libraries offer a range of publishing services to support open access scholarship and broaden the impact of academic work. From hosting conference proceedings and publishing select journals to managing manuscript submissions and assigning DOIs, our services are designed to meet the evolving needs of the Purdue research community. Authors can take advantage of Creative Commons licensing and enhanced discoverability through our open-access platform, Purdue e-Pubs.

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    2. All content

      Publishing of What? Libraries keeps hearing from Purdue folks: We didn't know Libraries offered this service. Here is what we offer. Here are our services. Beef up what some of these things are so when Libraries points them to it, it is clear what that means. Maybe we just give a bullet list without description. All content published through Library Publishing Services is published Open Access.

    3. conference materials

      What do we do? How do users benefit? Who can use the service? Purdue Conferences only? Who and what are our policies/practices?

    4. Conference Publishing

      The Libraries supports hosting and disseminating conference materials. This looks very passive. What is the service? Do we do anything else with conference publishing? What are people getting out of this service?

    5. Open Access Publishing and Dissemination

      Update description to be more action oriented. These don't describe what the service is. R doesn't know what services we offer for CC licenses. Do we consult, link, apply CC licenses? What does that mean?

  2. Oct 2025
    1. Downloads Map

      Not sure we need this page specifically for Downloads Map. Can we repurpose it? Maybe to be the page where "Share your Work in Purdue e-Pubs" links to? The map can be embedded at the bottom of that page. OR, we need a separate page for information about depositing works in Purdue e-Pubs.

    1. Jisc open policy finder (formerly Sherpa services): Search this database for open end sharing. Search by publisher name or journal title. Addendum to Publication Agreements for BTAA Authors: This recommended addendum, created by the Big Ten Academic Alliance, allows authors to retain enough rights to their work to share the work on their institution’s repository after a period of six (6) months from the date of publication. Purdue Author Addendum Letter for Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM): This form letter to publishers requests permission to deposit the author accepted manuscript (AAM) before the article has been published. Even if you have already signed an author agreement, you still may be able to share your work. We can help determine if your work can be shared: send the author accepted manuscript and the citation of your work to epubs@purdue.edu. Purdue Author Addendum Letter Requesting Deposit of Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM): This form letter to publishers requests permission to deposit the author accepted manuscript (AAM) after the article has been published if the publisher does not allow sharing based upon SHERPA/RoMEO.

      Would it be reasonable to put this information in a table? Left side = before publishing, Right side = after publishing. Before publishing = first three bullet points. After publishing = lower bullet point and Publication Eligibility Review Service (link to same page as "post your works to Purdue e-Pubs" link): Free service to Purdue community. Send a list of publications to epubs@purdue.edu, requesting a review. Staff review publisher sharing policies, check for eligible versions, create metadata records and post your works to Purdue e-Pubs.

    2. Search this database for open end sharing.

      Find author sharing policies for your target journal. Search by publisher name, journal title, or ISSN to discover details. Learn where your work can be shared and which version of the work can be shared.

    3. Without due caution, authors can easily sign away valuable rights and significantly limit the accessibility of their works.

      Publishing companies often require authors to assign all copyright of their works to the publisher as a requirement for publication. This is not always necessary. There are ways to negotiate retention of some author rights. Most publishers support author sharing policies. This allows faculty to retain certain rights to their works, such as sharing their works openly on an institutional repositiory, like Purdue e-Pubs. For more information on copyrights, visit the Purdue University Copyright Office (https://lib.purdue.edu/uco/).

  3. May 2020
    1. walking foot for the machine (more explanation in step 22)

      I don't have a walking foot. I just released the pressure from the foot by using the release button on top of the machine. You don't absolutely need this piece. Remember, quilting used to be a thing women did by hand at quilting bees.

    2. batting

      For my quilt, I used an old blanket as batting. It doesn't need to be actual batting. I've spoken with old ladies who used fleece material as batting. My grandma made lap quilts that had no batting at all.

    3. rotary cutter and mat + sharp scissors

      Sharp scissors are fine. Rotary cutter and mat are not needed, but can be helpful when making lots of cuts. My grandmother used a square piece of sandpaper to size her cuts of fabric. (Sandpaper won't slide around the fabric). She also used pinking shears to make zigzag cuts. This helps keep the fabric from unraveling.

  4. Feb 2020
  5. Sep 2018
    1. sometimes

      This single word, greatly minimizes the power of traditional journals. It should read nearly always, "...as opposed to traditional journals, which nearly always block access to nonsubscribers."