Science and Research Content

News Archive

DeepDyve closes 2010 with major milestones -

DeepDyve, a research engine for the Deep Web, has announced that it closed the 2010 calendar year with strong growth marked by an ever-increasing number of publisher partners, as well as a rapidly expanding subscriber base. According to the company, traffic, subscribers and article rentals grew… Read More

Attention Subscribers – www.myscoope.com lets you access Knowledgespeak using your mobile devices -

Mobile access for Knowledgespeak is now available via our new beta application, SCOOPE STM Mobile. Subscribers on the move can now gain easy access to Knowledgespeak through a reader-friendly mobile phone interface. This application is uniquely available in two versions:… Read More

Registrations for O’Reilly Tools of Change Publishing Conference drawing to a close -

Registration is open for participation in the O'Reilly Tools of Change (TOC) for Publishing Conference, to be hosted by publisher O'Reilly Media, US, on February 14-16, 2011. TOC seeks to connect the people, companies and organisations building the future of publishing, and… Read More

CERN selects Web of Knowledge from Thomson Reuters -

Business information provider Thomson Reuters, US, has announced that the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) has selected Web of Knowledge. CERN claims to be one of the world's largest and most respected centers for scientific research. Following a competitive bidding process, CERN selected Web… Read More

Really Strategies announces RSuite Cloud -

Content management consulting and solutions provider Really Strategies, Inc., US, recently announced the availability of RSuite Cloud, a web-based editorial and production system for automated multilingual publishing to print, web, and eBook formats. RSuite Cloud is a hosted end-to-end content management and publishing system for… Read More

Capital funding cut to hit UK university science departments hard, says RSC -

The Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) has expressed concern over the decision of the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) to slash more than 66 percent from capital funding in science during the next academic year. The move will act as a ticking time-bomb for… Read More


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