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Verifiable credentials (VCs) are digital credentials which follow the relevant World Wide Web Consortium open standards. They can represent information found in physical credentials, such as a passport or license, as well as new things that have no physical equivalent, such as ownership of a bank account.
The Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI) is a public statement of principles relating to open access to the research literature, [1] which was released to the public on February 14, 2002. [2] It arose from a convening in Budapest organized by the Open Society Institute on December 1–2 2001 to promote open access, which at that time was also ...
Code Co-op [open, proprietary] – (discontinued) peer-to-peer version control system (can use e-mail for synchronization) Configuration Management Version Control (CMVC) [proprietary, client-server] – version control system, no longer available; GNU arch [open, distributed] – A very early system; deprecated since 2009 in favor of Bazaar
In 2017, Paul Hawken published a book (Drawdown) compiling a set of concrete actions people could take to combat climate change. Inspired by this, Seth Bannon, founding partner at Fifty Years, a ...
new – open clone pull push branch – commit –branch clone/open update N/A add rm/del mv/rename N/A merge commit revert Fossil's repository is single sqlite file itself N/A Git: init – init –bare clone – clone –bare fetch push branch checkout pull N/A add rm mv cp [then] git add [nb 67] merge commit reset –hard bundle rebase Mercurial
A digital object identifier (DOI) is a unique persistent identifier to a published work, similar in concept to an ISBN. Wikipedia supports the use of DOI to link to published content. Where a journal source has a DOI, it is good practice to use it, in the same way as it is good practice to use ISBN references for book sources.
BOINC Manager Advanced View. The Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing [2] (BOINC, pronounced / b ɔɪ ŋ k / – rhymes with "oink" [3]) is an open-source middleware system for volunteer computing (a type of distributed computing). [4]
The number of open access journals increased by an estimated 500% during the 2000–2009 decade. Also, the average number of articles that were published per open access journal per year increased from approximately 20 to 40 during the same period, resulting in that the number of open access articles increased by 900% during that decade. [26]