Dear Julian,
I've put some quick notes up here: http://darwin.zoology.gla.ac.uk/~rpage/ispecies/how.html.
Ideally, if a source provides XML (or something similarly easy to handle, it can be added). As part of other projects I've been playing with getting specimen data from DiGIR providers, for example.
Regards
Rod
NCBI search us On 2 Nov 2005, at 16:48, Julian H wrote:
At 10:33 AM 11/2/2005, you wrote:
For fun I've created a site that searches three data sources - NCBI, Yahoo images, and Google Scholar for information on a taxonomic name. If you type in a name you get information on whether that organism has been sequenced (and if so, how many sequences are available), the first five images Yahoo finds on the web, and up to 10 documents from Google Scholar (with DOIs and links to PubMed, where available ).
If you'd like to try it go to http://ispecies.org (you'll get forwarded to a machine here in Glasgow).
Very cool. Do you have a page on "how it works"? What would be needed to add another source?
Keep up the good work, Julian
Julian Humphries DigiMorph.Org Geological Sciences University of Texas at Austin Austin, TX 78712 512-471-3275
Professor Roderic D. M. Page Editor, Systematic Biology DEEB, IBLS Graham Kerr Building University of Glasgow Glasgow G12 8QP United Kingdom
Phone: +44 141 330 4778 Fax: +44 141 330 2792 email: r.page@bio.gla.ac.uk web: http://taxonomy.zoology.gla.ac.uk/rod/rod.html reprints: http://taxonomy.zoology.gla.ac.uk/rod/pubs.html
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