The Collection of Computer Science Bibliographies
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The Collection of Computer Science Bibliographies is one of the oldest (if not the oldest) bibliography collections freely accessible on the Internet. It is a collection of bibliographies of scientific literature in computer science and (computational) mathematics from various sources, covering most aspects of computer science. The bibliographies are updated weekly from their original locations.
As of 2005 the collection contains more than 2 million unique references (mostly to journal articles, conference papers and technical reports), clustered in about 1500 bibliographies, and consists of more than 2.3 Gb (530 Mb gzipped) of BibTeX entries. More than 600,000 references contain cross-references to citing or cited publications.
More than 1 million references contain URLs to an online version of the paper. Abstracts are available for more than 800,000 entries. There are more than 2,000 links to other sites carrying bibliographic information.
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[edit] Duplicates and links
As The Collection of Computer Science Bibliographies consists of many subcollections there is a substantial overlap (roughly 1/3). At the end of 2005 there were more than 3 million records which represent about 2 million unique (in terms of normalized title and authors' last names) bibliographic entries.
The number of duplicates may be seen as a feature, because there is a greater chance for finding a freely available full text PDF of a searched publication. Publications are clustered by title and last names of authors, so it is possible to find an extended version (e.g. Technical Report or Thesis) of an article.
There are also generated links to Google Scholar and IEEE Xplore in the case no full text link was available directly. Almost every bibliographic query may be served in RSS format.
[edit] Major subcollections
[edit] History
The collection was started in 1993 by Alf-Christian Achilles with a simple email-based interface and limited number of entries. One year later the first web interface has been made available. Since then the Collection was maintained by Achilles in his spare time. At the end of 2002 the maintenance has been handed over to Paul Ortyl.