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BlogPosts tagged “features”

  • Mary Anne · August 31, 2016

    Overleaf Partners with the Center for Open Science on a New OSF Preprints Service

    August 30, 2016 | Charlottesville, VA, and London, UK

    We have just announced a new partnership with The Center for Open Science (COS), a non-profit science and technology company in Virginia. Overleaf will support the automatic submission of manuscripts authored on our platform onto the new OSF Preprints service that COS is launching this fall. OSF Preprints is a free open source preprint platform built and maintained by COS through their Open Science Framework (OSF). It helps researchers to discover new research as it happens and enables them to receive quick feedback on their own research. The Overleaf integration will initially be available on two OSF Preprints partner services, engrXiv and SocArXiv.

     

    engrxiv-and-socarxiv-links-on-overleaf.png

  • John · July 20, 2016

    Enabling Research Collaboration - reflections from our first London Institutional Conference

    The Enabling Research Collaboration event held last week in London was a great opportunity for the Overleaf team to talk to university librarians and research office staff to find out first hand what's really important to them.

    Many UK librarians talked about the challenges brought on by the new Open Access legislation that requires UK universities to archive publications from their authors in their institutional pre-print repositories at the point of acceptance to a journal. That is surprisingly tricky, because the paper doesn't usually get a DOI (a digital object identifier --- like a permanent bit.ly link for a scientific paper) until it is published, which can be weeks or months after acceptance. That makes it hard to link up the initial deposit record with the final published paper, which is exactly what they have to do for the next UK research assessment. Fortunately, solutions are on the way, and we talked about how Overleaf's publisher integrations could help make this process simpler for authors and for librarians who need to meet the new compliance requirements.

    We also heard from Simon Porter on "Research Data Mechanics", and our special guest Helen Josephine who flew over from Stanford to present on 'Facilitating Collaboration at Stanford University', who gives her thoughts on the day in this blog post.

    And there were cupcakes! :)

    Overleaf Cupcakes!

  • Tim · July 4, 2016

    New: Manage Shared References with Mendeley Groups!

    Select a Mendeley group by name by browsing or searching

    You can now link a Group on Mendeley to a .bib file on Overleaf! This is a great way for coauthors to manage a shared collection of references for their papers on Overleaf.

  • John · November 19, 2014

    Mendeley integration is here! Import your Mendeley reference library into Overleaf

    Mendeley API add BibTeX support feedback screenshot

    It’s here! The feature you've been asking for since we first launched our bibliography manager integration in September. You can now import your reference library directly from Mendeley to Overleaf, to make it easy to manage your references and citations in your projects.

  • September 5, 2013

    Open access publishing with writeLaTeX and F1000Research

    We're proud (and excited!) to be officially featured as part of the F1000Research submission process, for example as seen in this extract from their author guidelines page:

    F1000Research author guidelines screenshot

    F1000Research are also offering authors of software papers the chance to submit for free during 2013, to help encourage the documentation of the software used in life sciences research.

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