Here is a list of websites addressing aspects of digital scholarship that are not produced by educational or other institutions.
If you know of or think I should add other resources to these lists, please contact me. I’d love to hear about them.
- academHacK – “Tech Tools for Academics.”
- Academic Commons – “aims to share knowledge, develop collaborations, and evaluate and disseminate digital tools and innovative practices for teaching and learning with technology”
- Academic Productivity – “Knowledge acquisition, production and dissemination, new technologies and productivity strategies”
- Collections 2.0 – “Content and Community; The Future of Library Collections”
- Dan Cohen’s Digital Humanities Blog
- Digital Eccentric – “What I’m thinking about digital libraries and other things”
- Digital Scholarship – “Open Access Publishing Since 1989″
- Digital Scholarship in the Humanities
- Found History – “explores public and digital history in all its forms”
- HASTAC: Humanities, Arts, Science, and Technology Advanced Collaboratory – “a network of individuals and institutions inspired by the possibilities that new technologies offer us for shaping how we learn, teach, communicate, create, and organize our local and global communities”
- Melissa Terras’ Blog – “Adventures in Digital Humanities. Or Humanities Computing. Or whatever the academic discipline of using computational technology to forward humanities research is calling itself this week”
- Scholarship 2.0: An Idea Whose Time Has Come – “Describing and documenting the forms, facets, and features of alternative Web-based scholarly publishing philosophies and practices”
- Work Product – “Research notes in fiction, theory, and digital humanities”

- Image by 46137 via Flickr
Digg
del.icio.us
Facebook
LinkedIn
MySpace
Print
Technorati
Google Buzz