User:Ilya/OpenWetWare/Todo: Difference between revisions
From OpenWetWare
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*graph of connections among pages on the wiki | *graph of connections among pages on the wiki | ||
*citation box - a form to fill out (publication name, first author, date, etc) to help users cite materials outside Pubmed; examples on Wikipedia? | *citation box - a form to fill out (publication name, first author, date, etc) to help users cite materials outside Pubmed; examples on Wikipedia? | ||
*IRC backend (like #bioinformatics channel on IRC) | |||
===DOI=== | ===DOI=== |
Revision as of 19:34, 8 February 2008
Open
- stop sending bounces to return address provided by spammers (accept only outside mail for local delivery and only local mail for outside delivery?)
- filter out http 200 and 404 entries logwatch reports
- install openldap
- follow up openwetware hostname alias transfer to model (https://help.mit.edu/SelfService/)
- Add vhost directives to Apache logs to distinguish traffic among the sites
- Eventum
- RSS feeds in wiki extension
- add feed extensions to User:Ilya/OpenWetWare/Feeds
- feature requested: formatting of feeds (Magpie?)
- Embed PHPBB
- Semantic mediawiki - installed on test (see Austin's email for details)
- Move pheromone wiki to rackspace server:
- user accounts - openid
- delete spammers' user accounts
- <Googlesearchheader>
- try Drupal, see CMS
- try Pligg - an open source social networking content management system (CMS). It combines social bookmarking, bloggin, syndication and a democratic editorial system that enables users to collaboratively submit and promote articles
- stop rotation of OWW access logs (make a script to archive the logs before they are rotated?)
- enable rsync over SSH for off-site backups
- graph of connections among pages on the wiki
- citation box - a form to fill out (publication name, first author, date, etc) to help users cite materials outside Pubmed; examples on Wikipedia?
- IRC backend (like #bioinformatics channel on IRC)
DOI
- The DOI system was established to provide persistent identifiers for digital content because URLs were "never meant to be an identifier but only to designate the location of objects" (http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/04-02/davidson.html). In other words, DOIs were designed to be generic enough so that they could be used on top of any system, including but not limited to DNS/Internet. The DOI system provides a level of indirection between the identifier and the object it identifies. This is very useful for keeping URLs current - when location of an object changes, you just need to update the URL associated with the object's DOI.
- Besides resolution services, the DOI proxies/resolvers (which are operated by the Registration Agencies and are currently web-based) also maintain some structured metadata (like author, date, title, etc) for every object. This is useful for more efficient searching, for example.
- To obtain the real DOIs for OWW content, we'd need to register each DOI with a DOI Registration Agency. This apparently requires an yearly fee (just like the Internet domain registration fee) and possibly, a one-time fee for the DOI prefix (http://www.medra.org/en/terms.htm, http://www.crossref.org/02publishers/20pub_fees.html).
- To be confirmed. DNS is hierarchical: one needs only to register a domain name and then can have unlimited number of subdomains. DOI systems is flat, so each DOI (suffix) needs to be registered with the system, even if one owns a prefix.
Blogs
- Problem: new blog notifications are sent to you@example.com. For example:
- New blog created by admin\n\nAddress: http://blog.openwetware.org/outsidethebox/\nName: Outside The Box
Aggregation
- From Austin: an alternative to merging rss feeds on the wiki is to use Planet. Many sites out there use it, for example: