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  • Posted by John on July 20, 2016

    The Enabling Research Collaboration event held last week in London was a great opportunity for the Overleaf team to talk to university librarians and research office staff to find out first hand what's really important to them.

    Many UK librarians talked about the challenges brought on by the new Open Access legislation that requires UK universities to archive publications from their authors in their institutional pre-print repositories at the point of acceptance to a journal. That is surprisingly tricky, because the paper doesn't usually get a DOI (a digital object identifier --- like a permanent bit.ly link for a scientific paper) until it is published, which can be weeks or months after acceptance. That makes it hard to link up the initial deposit record with the final published paper, which is exactly what they have to do for the next UK research assessment. Fortunately, solutions are on the way, and we talked about how Overleaf's publisher integrations could help make this process simpler for authors and for librarians who need to meet the new compliance requirements.

    We also heard from Simon Porter on "Research Data Mechanics", and our special guest Helen Josephine who flew over from Stanford to present on 'Facilitating Collaboration at Stanford University', who gives her thoughts on the day in this blog post.

    And there were cupcakes! :)

    Overleaf Cupcakes!

  • Posted by John on July 19, 2016

    Check out the newly updated templates for The Optical Society (OSA) on Overleaf!

    The new OSA Express template and style guide on Overleaf

  • Posted by Henry on July 18, 2016

    This article was originally published on the ShareLaTeX blog and is reproduced here for archival purposes.

  • Posted by Mary Anne on July 8, 2016
    ASCE and Overleaf logos

    London – July 8, 2016: Overleaf and the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) announce a new partnership to provide ASCE authors with a new, enhanced authoring template and simplified submission process. Through this partnership, authors submitting to all 35 of the ASCE journals will have access to the ASCE authoring template within Overleaf - the award winning collaborative cloud-based writing and reviewing tool. Once finished writing, authors will be able to easily submit to any ASCE journal through a simplified submission link within the authoring template.

    The new ASCE LaTeX Template in Overleaf

  • Posted by Mary Anne on July 6, 2016
    The Royal Society and Overleaf logos

    London – July 6, 2016: Overleaf is pleased to announce a new partnership with The Royal Society. Through this partnership, authors submitting to Proceedings of the Royal Society A will have access to the award-winning Overleaf collaborative cloud-based writing and reviewing tool with 1-click submission into the Proceedings A ScholarOne submission system.

    The Royal Society's Proceedings A Template in Overleaf

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