PRONOM is an online technical registry providing impartial and definitive information about file formats, software products and other technical components required to support long-term access of electronic records.
The WAND Engineering Taxonomy includes over 1,200 terms and 165 synonyms.
Top Level terms include Engineering Design Process, Engineering Documents, Engineering Drawings, Engineering Fields, Engineering Materials, as well as Engineering Standards and Codes Organizations.
The WAND Engineering Taxonomy provides a strong foundation for any enterprise that needs to tag and organize documents related to the field of engineering.
Open Repository offers enhanced DSpace software with Elastic Search, JavaScript technologies & more. Easy structure-metadata, intuitive deposit & review workflow, tools for discovery, contorl access, share via social media & bibliography tools and tools for visualisation
The CEOS System Engineering Office (SEO) worked with the CEOS Working Group on Information Systems and Services (WGISS) to gather and organize key information on data policies, data access portals and interoperability protocols.
CEOS is currently operating and planning hundreds of Earth observation satellites. The information contained in this portal will improve the efficiency and effectiveness of gaining access to space-based Earth observation data to support many global intiatives with vast societal impact.
Software Package Data Exchange® (SPDX®) specification is a standard format for communicating the components, licenses and copyrights associated with software packages.
This paper introduces application profiles as a type of metadata schema. We use application profiles as a way of making sense of the differing relationship that implementors and namespace managers have towards metadata schema, and the different ways they use and develop schema. The idea of application profiles grew out of UKOLN's work on the DESIRE project (1), and since then has proved so helpful to us in our discussions of schemas and registries that we want to throw it out for wider discussion in the run-up to the DC8 Workshop in Ottawa in October.
Ask biological questions, get computational answers, choose the right tool to analyze your data. OMICtools bridges the gap between life science and computational biology.
DataCite, CrossRef und mEDRA lieferen auf Anforderung Metadaten zu einer DOI in verschiedenen Formaten zurück: RDF XML (application/rdf+xml), RDF Turtle (text/turtle), Citeproc JSON (application/vnd.citationstyles.csl+json), Formatted text citation (text/x-bibliography), BibTeX (application/x-bibtex),
DataCite und CrossRef: RIS (application/x-research-info-systems)
Nur DataCite: Schema.org in JSON-LD (application/vnd.schemaorg.ld+json), DataCite XML (application/vnd.datacite.datacite+xml)
Nur CrossRef: CrossRef Unixref XML (application/vnd.crossref.unixref+xml)
Nur mEDRA: ONIX for DOI (application/vnd.medra.onixdoi+xml)
METS: An Overview & Tutorial: Metadata Encoding and Transmission Standard (METS) Official Web Site. The METS schema is a standard for encoding descriptive, administrative, and structural metadata regarding objects within a digital library, expressed using the XML schema language of the World Wide Web Consortium. The standard is maintained in the Network Development and MARC Standards Office of the Library of Congress, and is being developed as an initiative of the Digital Library Federation.
European Research Community on Flow, Turbulence and Combustion Database. This classic collection of test cases for validation of turbulence models started as an EU / ERCOFTAC project led by Pr. W. Rodi in 1995. It is maintained by Dr. T. Craft at Manchester since 1999. Initialy limited to experimental data, computational results, and results and conclusions drawn from the ERCOFTAC Workshops on Refined Turbulence Modelling (SIG15).