***With apologies for cross-posting***
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Cambridge University Press is pleased to announce the release of further
enhancements to Cambridge Journals Online (CJO). Major new developments in
functionality and design provide improved access to the content of our
collection of over 230 leading academic and practitioner journals in
science, technology and medicine, the humanities and social sciences.
Informed by detailed consultation with the library and research
communities, Cambridge schedules three major releases of updated
functionality each year. This enables us to develop a flexible,
customer-focused service and ensures that we can respond rapidly to
requests for new features and functionality.
With the latest release in June 2008, there have been a number of
developments, including:
Social bookmarking services, which allow users to save URL links of web
pages they want to remember or share. Users can now bookmark links from
journal homepages and article abstracts via such services as del.icio.us,
Connotea., and Bibsonomy. CJO is also fully enabled for users of the
CiteULike service.
Enhanced search facilities, which include: Cite Search for titles matches
the title of a journal as the user types; context-sensitive spelling
correction suggests alternative spellings to words not matched in the
initial search; automatic saved searches with re-run and edit facilities;
and the ability to search throughout the CJO website using the ‘quick
search’ option.
Improved access: - users can now to log in directly from the abstract page
of an article. Also, a Widget can be downloaded from the main CJO homepage
and used to search the site.
Sample and New issue links have been created for each journal to directly
access the journal’s sample issue or new issues.
Comments on articles - The second phase of development for this complex
functionality includes such additions for CJO users as recognising comments
by unique identifiers, the ability to set up comment alerts, and the option
to publish comments anonymously.
As a not-for-profit publisher Cambridge University Press is uniquely placed
to offer a stable publishing environment in a volatile market place. The
release of these enhancements demonstrates our continued investment
commitment to online publishing, the academic community and our society
partners.
Even as the changes detailed above were launched last month, Cambridge
University Press is continuing research and development to provide new
features and further enhancements for CJO. We look forward to announcing
the next raft of improvements in the coming months.
Susan Soule
Journals Marketing Manager
Cambridge University Press, Americas
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