KEEP THE REVOLUTION GOING! http://caaconference.org/
Repository of my on-going work for the CAA 2015
- The abstract (Abstract.md) for the CAA conference, Part 10 "Open software, open data", session A ArcheoFOSS: free/open source software and archaeological research, ten years later
- The License (License.md): CC BY 4.0
- The slideshow folder with a preview as gh-pages
- My paper Paper with preview as gh-pages
##Material used for my paper
- Marwick B.(2014) "Reproducible Research: A view from the social sciences"
- Marwick B. (2015). "Doing quantitative archaeology with open source software"
- University of California Museum of Paleontology (2015) "Understanding Science". 3 January 2015
- Wikipedia (2015) "Humanitarian-FOSS"
- Tal Galili, Shane et al. from Stackoverflow (2010) How does software development compare with statistical programming/analysis?
- Bevan, A. (2012) 'Value, authority and the open society. Some implications for digital and online archaeology' in C. Bonacchi (ed) Archaeology and Digital Communication: Towards Strategies of Public Engagement. London: Archetype, 1-14.
- Dafermos, George and Van Eeten, Michel J.G. (2014) Images of innovation in discourses of free and open source software. First Monday, [S.l.], nov. 2014.
- Ducke B. (2012). Natives of a connected world: Free and open source software in archaeology. World Archaeology 44(4): 571–579.
- Fanelli, Daniele ( 2013) “Redefine Misconduct as Distorted Reporting.” Nature 494: 149.
- Heller, L., The, R., & Bartling, S. (2014). Dynamic publication formats and collaborative authoring. In S. Bartling & S. Friesike (eds) Opening science, 191–211. Springer,
- Kansa, Eric C., Sarah Whitcher Kansa, and Benjamin Arbuckle (2014) “Publishing and Pushing: Mixing Models for Communicating Research Data in Archaeology.” - International Journal of Digital Curation 9.1: 57–70. -
- Kelty, Christopher M. (2001) “Free Software/Free Science.” First Monday 6 (12).
- Kelty, Christopher M. (2008). Two Bits: The Cultural Significance of Free Software. Experimental Futures. Durham: Duke University Press.
- Latour, B., & Woolgar, S. 1979. Laboratory life: The social construction of scientific facts. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage.
- Pfister, D.S. (2011) 'Networked expertise in the era of many-to-many communication: on Wikipedia and invention', Social Epistemology 253, 217-31
- Richardson, L-J. (2014). Understanding Archaeological Authority in a Digital Context, Internet Archaeology 38.
- Rowlands, I., Nicholas, D., Williams, P., Huntington, P., Fieldhouse, M., Gunter, B., Withey, R., Jamali, H.R., Dobrowolski, T. and Tenopir, C. (2008) 'The Google generation: the information behaviour of the researcher of the future', Aslib Proceedings 604, 290-310.
- Vinck, Dominique, and Claire Clivaz. 2014. “Les Humanités Délivrées. Savoir Et Culture Réinventés Hors Du Livre.” Revue d’anthropologie des connaissances 8.4: 681–704.