Bazsites.com Open Access Resources
Directory Topics
On the Web
- FreeFullText.com - Direct links to scholarly periodicals which allow some or all of their online content to be viewed by anyone with Internet access for free.
- MoneyScience Financial Intelligence Network - An open-access resource for academics and practitioners working in finance and economics, physics, applied mathematics and computing.
Wikipedia Articles
- Open Communication - Open Communication, or Open Access to Communication resources, means that anyone, on equal conditions with a transparent relation between cost and pricing, can get access to and share communication resources on one level to provide value added services on another level in a layered communication system architecture. Simply put, Open Access ...
- Go Open Source - Go Open Source was a campaign mainly concentrating on South Africa to create awareness of, educate about, and provide access to free/open-source software. The campaign was important in ensuring, once awareness of free and open source software was created, that interested parties had the ability to gain access to the software and services and that they have access to additional resources for support and training.
- Open housing - Open housing, also known as fair housing, is the sale and rental of private housing free of discriminatory practices or policies. Open housing refers to the goal of a unitary housing market in which a person's background (as opposed to financial resources) does not arbitrarily restrict access.
- Peter Suber - Peter Suber (born November 8, 1951) is the creator of the game Nomic and a leading voice in the open access movement. He is the senior research professor of philosophy at Earlham College, the open access project director at Public Knowledge, and a senior researcher at SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition)
- Open (system call) - In most modern operating systems, a program that needs access to a file stored in a filesystem uses the open system call. This system call allocates resources associated to the file (the file descriptor), and returns a handle that the process will use to refer to that file from then on.