Make charts and dashboards online from CSV or Excel data. Create interactive D3.js charts, reports, and dashboards online. API clients for R and Python.
Die Situation bei Fahrplanauskünften Allgemein sieht die Situation beim Zugriff auf Fahrplanauskunftsdaten eher recht traurig aus. Die einzelnen , die für ihre Pläne verantwortlich sind betrachten die...
oEmbed is a format for allowing an embedded representation of a URL on third party sites. The simple API allows a website to display embedded content (such as photos or videos) when a user posts a link to that resource, without having to parse the resource directly.
CrossRef is an independent membership association, founded and directed by publishers. CrossRef’s mandate is to connect users to primary research content, by enabling publishers to work collectively. CrossRef is also the official DOI® link registration agency for scholarly and professional publications. Our citation-linking network today covers tens of millions of articles and other content items from thousands of scholarly and professional publishers.
The Mendeley API binary battle
Build an app, make science more open, win $10,001!
We’ve built the world’s largest crowdsourced research database, available under a Creative Commons license. We want to see a world in which science is mashed up... with anything. Science can benefit everyone, but it needs the support of the tech community to make it happen.
In the last post we introduced a new parameter for our REST API. With the last release another new API feature was introduced which allows for a better usage of BibSonomy in browser based applications. The API is now able to output JSON. Instead of XML, all API request can be switched with the URL parameter format to return JSON.
BibSonomy provides an API (Application Programming Interface) which other software programs can use to access the services and resources provided by BibSonomy. It is build on the REST (Representational State Transfer) architecture style and enables programs to post data (for example creating a new user), read data (for example getting the publications or tags of a user), updating or deleting data (for example one's own entries).
Recently, a new parameter for reading a user's tags was added. The parameter enables an alphabetical or frequency-based ordering of tags.
The Product Advertising API provides programmatic access to Amazon’s product selection and discovery functionality so that developers like you can advertise Amazon products to monetize your website.
One of the fastest growing trends today is combining data and functionality from several sources to create new services that provide a unique user experience. They’re called mash ups. Think Google Maps. Yahoo Pipes. Facebook Plug-Ins. Libraries are doing Web mash ups as well: Meebo Instant Messaging. Library Lookup. Bookburro. And, in a way, they’ve been doing all kinds of mash ups for years. Think story hour, open-shelf access, cafes, book lockers.
# Perennial favorites open source, APIs, and mobile devices given as top trends, among others
# Technology glitches during streaming video, distracting chat room discussion during panel
# Karen Coyle: Future may not involve libraries "if we don't make some extreme changes."
The goal of the API is to allow application developers access to all of the arXiv data, search and linking facilities with an easy-to-use programmatic interface. This page provides links to developer documentation, and gives instructions for how to join the mailing list and contact other developers and maintainers.
The Scopus Application Program Interface (API) enables you to search the largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature and quality web sources.
You can select Scopus data elements and create your own mashups.
The API returns Scopus data in a format that is easily integrated into an application or your web site.
The TagCommons Working Group is having a fascinating discussion about the mechanism by which a community can agree to share tag data. Here are some of the options before us:
K. Joseph, P. Landwehr, and K. Carley. Social Computing, Behavioral-Cultural Modeling and Prediction, page 75--83. Cham, Springer International Publishing, (2014)
F. Morstatter, J. Pfeffer, H. Liu, and K. Carley. Proceedings of the Seventh International AAAI Conference on Weblogs and Social Media, page 400--408. The AAAI Press, (2013)
D. Hou, and D. Pletcher. Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Recommendation Systems for Software Engineering, page 26--30. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2010)