"Generative AI’s environmental costs are soaring — and mostly secret
Last month, #OpenAI chief executive Sam #Altman finally admitted what researchers have been saying for years — that the artificial intelligence (#AI) industry is heading for an #energy#crisis."
#SearchRxiv is an #OpenAccess#repository "where librarians and researchers can share searches created for literature reviews. To support findability and #reuse, searchRxiv issues a #DOI for every unique search posted and adds indexing to the entry."
#Medknow was bought by #WoltersKluwer and now some 10 % of the 10.4103 #DOI's are broken, pointing to a default lww.com or journals.lww.com frontpage.
That's without counting the minority cases which give you either a #Thieme 404, a broken OJS install or a #CLOCKSS copy through chooser.crossref.org, etc.
US to cancel Alaska oil, gas leases issued under Trump
"Interior also said it would protect 13 million acres in the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska, a 23 million-acre area on the state's North Slope that is the largest undisturbed public land in the United States. The agency would prohibit new leasing on more than 10 million acres, or more than 40% of the reserve."
I used to publish my slides on SpeakerDeck, which is now long defunct, and then defaulted to do it in SlideShare, but I'm not hundred percent convinced. I'd like to find a more open way of publishing them.
Is there any Fediverse friendly way of publishing them? Maybe some of the open access tools?
I'd be most grateful if you could boost this question if the topic is of your interest…
Just noticed myself doing an interesting thing:
I opened the pdf on my phone of a paper I wanted to read (synced via #Zotero -> #Zotfile -> #Dropbox), saw that it was published by #eLife, and thought "huh, this will be nicer to read via the website" and clicked the #DOI to read it there instead.
Welcome to acronym city! I recently published my Master's Dissertation. I say "published" - I just shoved it up on a website. But real academic publications should have a DOI - it's an identifier which is supposed to make it easier for people to find and cite paper. You know how books have a unique […]
"Much of the attention of methodologists has focused on how to recognize and control for unwanted factors that can affect outcomes of interest. But psychology is also important: it tells us that own human biases can be just as important in leading us astray"
[2] Bishop, D.V.M., 2020. The psychology of experimental psychologists: overcoming cognitive constraints to improve research - The 47th Sir Frederic Bartlett Lecture. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 73, 1–19. https://doi.org/10.1177/1747021819886519