Oops, dropped these:
- https://annas-archive.org/
- https://www.wosonhj.com/
- https://www.vialibri.net/ (Physical)
- (Placeholder for me when I’m on PC)
How to find things:
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Use Anna’s Archive (linked above). It uses their database in their search, as well as Libgen and others.
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There’s also a Telegram bot for Scihub and Libgen which are handy: https://www.reddit.com/r/scihub/s/5p7FCk1IOH https://github.com/1337w0rm/Libgen-Telegram-Bot
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Their Tor links are on wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sci-Hub?wprov=sfla1 (check out the see also sections too). Requires a Tor capable browser: https://www.torproject.org/ or https://brave.com/ (Chromium)
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For direct links: https://www.reddit.com/r/scihub/s/k6hFIhh51w
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Use this free VPN if you don’t have one. You will not be able to connect without it on many connections: https://protonvpn.com/
If you cannot find what you need, you have options:
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You can post on Wosonhj (above)
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Post on Twitter or Masto with the tag #icanhazpdf
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Search Research Gate
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Email the author
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Many unis require an open access preprint be hosted somewhere these days (worth checking).
More tools:
- Ref manager: https://www.zotero.org/
- Reader: https://calibre-ebook.com/
- More (it’s my WIP, scroll down): https://github.com/stark1tty/awesome-PhD/tree/patch-1
Given the entire scientific community uses this, how the hell do journals still make any money at all?
The 3k publication fee per article. Plus selling print copies to tenured profs.
Jesus christ. Proposal. All scientists agree they’ll publish to Wikipedia and donate 50€
Yeah it’s nuts. However there are a huge number of open-access journals, and they are becoming more common. BMC/PLOS are the big ones in my field (biology/genetics).
PLOS still charges a fee if your institution is not part of their “network”, and it’s not cheap, but their articles are free for all to access.