We just submitted a report on our REMARK initiative titled "Reproducibility Standards in Economics" in collaboration with @curvenote. This project was funded by @JohnsHopkins@MSELibrary Open Source Programs Office and the Alfred P. @SloanFoundation. https://t.co/Xfx9wUzlCC
I'm starting my own scientific journal with @Curvenote Journals!
https://t.co/mtLc1qDMMZ will have
🔬research
⬇️#opensource tools
👨🏫teaching materials
...for making science easier for scientists to do via better design.
Video intro ▶️ https://t.co/ZaezTYYSz8
Next up on the https://t.co/0BoI1c9tVA publicity tour: #EMC2024 in Copenhagen! If you're around this week and interested in writing an interactive EM article, catch me or @ColinOphus during one of the breaks, and we'd happily walk you through the process 🙌
Converting a manuscript to Word or PDF for review or publication separates text and figures from the code and data used to create them, flattening data into static representations. @curvenote with @MicroscopySoc and @theAGU are working to change that. https://t.co/UDC1ZYoMwN
@Curvenote creates interactive publications based on digital-coding notebooks and aims to increase the transparency and reproducibility of data science. https://t.co/NSYHCAAd5g
🌟 Spotlight on @g_varnavides!
Georgios Varnavides is a postdoctoral Miller research fellow at @UCBerkeley, where he works on material science. He's a marimo power user who cares deeply about digital science communication. 👨🔬🎙️
Georgios has used marimo's WebAssembly features to make interactive science content — from notebooks, to apps, to slides — that runs directly in the browser! He's even found a way to combine @observablehq framework and marimo, using an advanced marimo feature called marimo islands 🏝️.
Together with the @curvenote team, @g_varnavides has been pushing the boundaries of digital scientific publication. We're grateful to have you as a member of the marimo community, Georgios!
“Science has changed a lot (...) but fundamentally, we still write papers like we did 100 years ago, in a way that doesn’t prioritize methods and data analysis.” Amanda Heidt reports on how the publishing platform @curvenote is working to change that. https://t.co/KQ3dxsFh23
Glad to see @curvenote getting traction
Its such an obvious next step for research publishing
We did a demo of an open publishing platform at JupyterCon in 2015 called OpenJupyter, but it was just an idea
YC backed too!
https://t.co/ffhrdgH2mw
h/t @AnnCamp03030273
We got a mention in @Nature!! 🤩
Better scientific article designs are gaining momentum, and the researchers featured here are among the most innovative I’ve seen use @curvenote’s tech.
A publishing platform that places code front and centre 👩💻
Curvenote creates interactive publications based on digital-coding notebooks and aims to increase the transparency and reproducibility of data science. https://t.co/wi29BNoQmB