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News from JURN

Monthly Archives: June 2021

Missing in open

27 Sunday Jun 2021

Posted by David Haden in How to improve academic search, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

Google Scholar has a useful new feature. If an article was funded from the public purse, and yet not freely published online with the agreed time, then Scholar will flag that the expected public open access version is missing.

However the flags appear on the Scholar Profile section, not as a red flag alongside each search result.

Taking a purely random example, this is what appears on the sidebar of the author’s page…

On clicking through from this widget, one gets a list with the missing papers sorted to the top…

You can see that the OA mandates are usefully itemised per-paper.

Un-squish the line-height of the Google Search results

26 Saturday Jun 2021

Posted by David Haden in JURN tips and tricks

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In recent days the snippet text in the Google Search results has been squished down in its line-height. Here’s how to fix it in a Stylus script…

#search .g {
         line-height: 1.4; !important;
    }

I simply paste this into my already-installed Classic Links fix, which runs inside the browser add-on Stylus.

Freeware to automatically screenshot every time you click

23 Wednesday Jun 2021

Posted by David Haden in JURN tips and tricks

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Free software that automatically takes a screenshot every time you click somewhere with your mouse? You’re in luck, there’s one built into Windows 7 and later. Or there was until the Windows 10 Creators Update, when it was bjorked.

In Windows 7 it was called Problem Steps Recorder (PSR), later just Steps Recorder, and can be found via typing psr or steps into the Start menu search-box. It automatically makes one whole-screen screenshot per user click, but is limited in the number of screenshots it can make. It’s meant to be a quick tool that helps IT technicians see what a user is getting hung up on, without having to record and send video or launch a Remote Desktop connection.

Slightly more advanced is the Windows freeware Imago Recorder 1.2, which has no cap on the number of screenshots. You do need to manually hack its config file to get full-size screenshots (open imago.conf.xml and change resize to 0). Automatically captures the whole screen only. Although I’m guessing it may be able to capture a region if you delve into hacking the .XML config further?

The freeware Snappy can capture the whole screen on a click, and is a bit more friendly and fully-featured than Imago. I had no success with getting it to repeatedly capture a pre-defined region on a click, only the whole screen. Though it can grab a region in the usual screenshotting way.

StepsToReproduce 1.0 was freeware meant as a taster for the more fully featured and paid StepShot, later StepShot Guides. StepShot 4.0 was bought out for the underlying technology in 2019 and since 2020 is off the market and no longer available for purchase. However this older cut-down freeware is still around and still works. It is a rarity in freeware in that it can do more than full-screen on a click… but it appears to be limited to 800 x 600px in its region capture. The cursor being captured was a feature that could not be turned off, as StepShot was meant to be for rapidly producing software how-to documentation. But if you need the cursor gone, then try a temporary ‘one dot’ or thin ‘bar’ cursor that won’t be noticed. The full StepShot was fairly easy to use and could automatically capture a custom region of unlimited size, simultaneously with user mouse clicks (or a looping JitBit macro emulating the same).

Beyond that you start to quickly get into expensive/subscription corporate territory.

Those who have lots of full-screen screenshots would then need to crop their repeating target-region from each one, by using a friendly freeware batch image-cropper such as Image Tools.

Apparently Mac users have Shottr, and Linux users have Folgr, but those are just names I’ve encountered being recommended as StepShot clones. I know nothing more about those.

Added to JURN

16 Wednesday Jun 2021

Posted by David Haden in New titles added to JURN

≈ Leave a comment

Computational Communication Research

American Business Review

Charles Williams Quarterly, The (1976-2008, he was one of the Inklings circle around C.S. Lewis and Tolkien)

Brandeis Judaic Studies Journal

Performance, Religion, and Spirituality

Cinematography in Progress

The DOAJ requires a new Managing Director

15 Tuesday Jun 2021

Posted by David Haden in Spotted in the news

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The DOAJ requires a new full-time Managing Director, experienced and “a strong leader”. Deadline: 9th July 2021.

How to extract Windows Explorer thumbnail previews

14 Monday Jun 2021

Posted by David Haden in JURN tips and tricks

≈ Leave a comment

How to extract Windows Explorer thumbnail previews from a specific Windows folder, using old-school desktop freeware:

1. Install the freeware Q-Dir, a quad-view Windows Explorer replacement. This has a useful “print the folder as you see it” feature, something lacking in Windows Explorer.

2. Use Q-Dir to navigate to your chosen folder. Show the folder with medium or large thumbnails, as you prefer. Then print the folder view to a Microsoft .XPS file, using Q-Dir. The .XPS format was Microsoft’s attempt at a .PDF rival, and all Windows installations should be able to print to it.

3. Now install the little freeware utility STDU Extractor and load the .XPS file you just printed. This utility can extract images inside several formats, including from .XPS files. STDU will show you a preview of the available thumbnails and let you extract as .PNG files or in other image formats. For some reason its batch extract is very slow, but the individual select-and-extract is fast.

For batch processing of a folder with thousands of Windows thumbnail previews, you’re probably looking at an overnight job — due the slowness of batch in STDU Extractor. The workflow is more useful if you just want a few dozen at a uniform size, and without faffing around trying to manually take exactly-sized screenshots. As you can see from the above final-output example, the drop-shadow is also extracted. But neatly so.

What you don’t get is the extracted thumbnail being given the name of the file it represents. So far as I can tell, no such software exists for that sort of extraction.

So long as you have software that gives you Windows Explorer previews for its file-types, the above workflow can work even on files that are not images. For instance, the above test is with an E-on Vue 2016 3D scene file.


Saving the .XPS to .PDF and extracting images from that will not work. The preview thumbnails become fragmented into strips by the PDF printing process.

There are also freeware extractors that will attempt to load the Windows thumbnails .db database in the Windows ../System folder and extract from that. But that’s ‘pot luck’, even if you can get them to open. The above can target a specific folder and a few specific icons.

Release: DocFetcher Pro

06 Sunday Jun 2021

Posted by David Haden in Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

DocFetcher Pro is now available and stable in a bugfixed 1.1.x version, as a perpetual free demo (limited to five search results, per search) or for $40 via Gumroad. It’s a leading desktop PC file-indexer and local keyword searcher, which in its freeware version was bjorked last September by a Java update. The maker then took the opportunity to put the project on a pro footing. This version now includes the required Java modules inside the software, so you don’t have to install Java on your PC.

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