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The British (and Irish) Are Coming

Thanks to the efforts of the University of Manchester Computing department, the new XML trial version of the online public access catalog Copac is now Zotero-compatible. Containing over 30 million records, this tremendous resource provides free access to the merged online catalogs of major UK and Irish university research libraries, plus the British Library and the National Library of Scotland.

Copac offers an excellent model for other data providers, self-publishers, and bloggers who wish to make their content available to Zotero. By embedding COinS tags in their library records, the Copac developers have made it possible for Zotero to automatically capture the bibliographic information contained in them. The Copac XML database can be accessed via the Copac v3 experimental interface, which is scheduled to go live on March 28.

What Other Citation Formats Would You Like Zotero to Generate

We would like to know what citation and bibliography styles people in the Zotero community are yearning for. Currently Zotero generates bibliographies in MLA, APA, and three varieties of Chicago styles (and an ASA format is under development).

Ultimately we intend to offer a utility which makes the process of developing new styles much more user friendly, but for the time being it is a bit more technical than our average user can muster. We are looking to put together more citation and bibliography styles that appeal to a broad audience. Post your requests for new formats in this thread. One of our programmers is going to be hammering out a handful of these styles and now is your chance to have your voice heard.

Dan Cohen to present “Zotero and the Promise of Social Computing in Academia”

CHNM’s Dan Cohen will present on Zotero at the University of Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities on Tuesday, March 13 from 12:30-1:45 pm. The talk will be held in the MITH Conference Room in McKeldin Library, room B0135. For directions and other contact information, please visit the MITH homepage.

“Zotero and the Promise of Social Computing in Academia”
by DAN COHEN (Center for History and New Media, George Mason)

The Library of Congress contains over a million dissertations. Each of
these works represents an average of four years of work by a
specialist who has diligently and intelligently scanned, sorted, read,
categorized, assessed, and annotated hundreds or thousands of primary
and secondary sources. The staggering scale of this work–literally
billions of person-hours in dissertation work alone, not to mention
the research that went into the millions of other books those
dissertations share shelf space with–should be matched by the regret
academia should feel since almost all of this research is buried in
filing cabinets or boxes or worse: soon-to-be obsolete digital media
such as a floppy disk or the tacit knowledge of a researcher’s mind.
Often the most we can expect to see from all of this work, aside from
the book or article it informed, is the bibliography that is buried at
the end of the printed text.

But what if we could use digital methods to recapture that enormous
amount of scholarly work, the 90% of research that, like an iceberg,
is hidden beneath the 10% of the final product? The Zotero project
(which I co-direct) has released software that allows users to build,
tag, and annotate their own research collections, with a high level of
integration with online texts and databases; the next phase of the
project will add a server through which users and groups can exchange,
aggregate, and recommend digital texts and resources. If humanities
researchers–professors, students, and others–widely adopted such
digital tools, many parts of the scholarly process could be
recaptured, and, more important, networked together. See
www.zotero.org for more downloads and more information.

You Don’t Have to Take Our Word For It

Every day, more and more users are downloading Zotero and putting it to use in interesting ways. If you’re still on the fence, you don’t have to take our word for it; see what other people are saying about our next-generation research tool:

“If you spend most of your time doing research on the Web, you need Zotero”
Linux.com

Zotero “is perhaps the best Firefox extension that most users have never heard of, unless you are an academic historian or social scientist, in which case Zotero is becoming quite the rage. It is also percolating into other academic fields, including law, math and science.”
AI3

“Every lawyer wants this”
Bankruptcy Practice Pro

“Researchers, students and librarians everywhere wondering how they ever did without it.”
Dead Reckoning

“It is a revolution in how to approach collecting references”
Organic Researcher

“I have been using Zotero for a number of months and I can safely say it’s one of my most favorite research tools. I don’t do this often, but I highly recommend Zotero.”
Home Office Voice

“it makes the whole citation process so quick and intuitive that I wish it had appeared on the scene years ago!”
Household Opera

“It’s the ultimate in digital note card technology.”
Fundanmentals

“Zotero is already an amazing piece of software that could change the way we do history.”
Digital History Hacks

“Groundbreaking. A glimpse of the 21st century scholarly information landscape.”
Matthew G Kirschenbaum

Read more about What People are Saying About Zotero and check back frequently for new comments.

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