Welcome to my bibliography page. Here you can find my bibliographic information, that is, my personally managed bibliography. I am pretty interested in this area, because my current work in the ShaRef project aims at creating a tool for improving the ways in which researchers individually and collaboratively manage bibliographic information. The HTML pages used here have produced with ShaRef, so you might also be interested to give it a try...? My bibliographic information is available in the following forms:
* HTML page. Heavily cross-linked (intra-page links and with the title and an author indices) and connected with all forms of external online information (URIs, DOIs, OpenURLs). However, the OpenURLs may be of limited use to you, because they point to the library server of my local university...
* PDF printout. Generated by LaTeX from the BibTeX source.
* BibTeX source. This is the source for the above representations. It will be replaced with an XML-based format in the long term, but the XML format is still a bit unstable (but go ahead and give it a try if you feel adventurous).
* TeX2Unicode conversion tables. Here you'll find the character conversion tables we use to translate between BibTeX (i.e., LaTeX) characters and Unicode. You can get the conversion tables in various machine-readbale formats, so if you are looking for general LaTeX-to-Unicode character conversion, you might find this useful.
##maintainer_type: organization ##subjects: math ##page_type: software ##date: Mon Apr 30 07:09:22 PDT 2007 ##editor: Jim Pitman ##description: latexml is a program, written in Perl, that attempts to faithfully mimic TeX's behaviour, but produces XML instead of dvi. The document model of the target XML makes explicit the model implied by LaTeX. The processing and model are both extensible; you can define the mapping between TeX constructs and the XML fragments to be created. A postprocessor, latexmlpost converts this XML into other formats such as HTML or XHTML, with options to convert the math into MathML (currently only presentation) or images.
What Topic Maps Do
When XML is introduced into an organization it is usually used for one of two purposes: either to structure the organization's documents or to make that organization's applications talk to other applications. These are both useful ways of using XML, but they will not help anyone find the information they are looking for. What changes with the introduction of XML is that the document processes become more controllable and can be automated to a greater degree than before, while applications can now communicate internally and externally. But the big picture, something that collects the key concepts in the organization's information and ties it all together, is nowhere to be found.
[Diagram]
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