Best Practices for Software Registries and Repositories
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(This post is cross-posted on the SciCodes website, the SSI blog, the ASCL blog, and the FORCE11 blog, Better Scientific Software (BSSW) website.) Read more
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(This post is cross-posted on the SciCodes website, the SSI blog, the ASCL blog, and the FORCE11 blog, Better Scientific Software (BSSW) website.) Read more
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(This post is cross-posted on the URSSI blog, the SSI blog and the Netherlands eScience Center blog, and is archived in Zenodo) Read more
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(This post is cross-posted on the UK Software Sustainability Institute blog, the Netherlands eScience Center blog and the US Research Software Sustainability Institute blog.) ReSA’s mission is to bring research software communities together to collaborate on the advancement of research software. Its vision is to have research software recognized and valued as a fundamental and vital component of research worldwide. Given our mission, there are multiple reasons that it’s important for us to understand the landscape of communities that are involved with software, in aspects such as preservation, citation, career paths, productivity, and sustainability. One of these reasons is that ReSA seeks to be a link between these communities, which requires identifying and understanding them. We want to be sure that there aren’t significant community organizations that we don’t know about to involve in our work. Also, identifying where there are gaps will help us create the opportunities and communities of practices as required. When thinking about these communities, it’s clear that in addition to those that focus on software, there are others for which software is just a small part of their interest. Some examples are communities that focus on open science, reproducibility, roles and careers for people who are less visible in research, publishing and review, and other types of scholarly products and digital objects. ReSA also wants to define how we fit and interact with that broader scholarly landscape.
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This is blog post was published on the Software Sustainability Institute’s website. Read more
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This is blog post was published on the Software Sustainability Institute’s website. Read more
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This is blog post was published on the Software Sustainability Institute’s website Read more
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This blog post was published in the Software Sustainability Institute’ website, and includes the conclusions of our discussions at the Research Software Engineers for Data Science (RSE4DataScience) meeting at the Alan Turing Institute in London. Read more
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This blog post was published in the Software Sustainability Institute’ website, and includes the conclusions of our discussions at the Research Software Engineers for Data Science (RSE4DataScience) meeting at the Alan Turing Institute in London. Read more
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This blog post was published in the Oxford e-Research Centre’s website, University of Oxford, in the occasion of the Centre’s 10th Anniversary. Read more
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This is blog post was published on the Nature’s Scientific Data blog. Read more
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On 23rd May 2013, I participated in the ORCID CodeFest (see also the details in the ORCID website) and won the first prize to attend the ODIN Codefest in CERN. Read more