NEP: New Economics Papers
Dear NEP subscriber, I am the founder of NEP: New Economics Papers.
Today, I am sending you a special announcement on behalf of the NEP team. It is the first ever in NEP's ten year old history. We are pleased to let you know that NEP reports are now available via RSS feeds. The feeds are the work of David Hugh-Jones, see http://davidhughjones.googlepages.com/.
RSS began as a way for readers to easily read updates in blogs, but now many other types of media, e.g. newspapers use them. The most recent versions of Firefox and Internet Explorer can read RSS feeds, as can specialized web sites like Google Reader, Bloglines, My Yahoo, iGoogle. Many find reading RSS feeds preferable to reading e-mail. Of course, NEP reports are still available via email.
To subscribe to an RSS feed, go to http://nep.repec.org/ and click on your chosen report. Then click on the orange icon in your browser's address bar, or on the "RSS feed" link in the web page itself. While on the NEP web page, check out whether you would be interested in reports other than the one(s) you are subscribed to. And if you can think of some field that is missing, you can become the founding editor of a new report. Send your ideas to Marco Novarese as . Papers announced on NEP come from bibliographic data submitted to RePEc. To have your own working papers listed on RePEc, use your institution's RePEc archive. There are over 900 RePEc archives out there.
If your institution does not have an archive, You can submit your papers to the Munich Personal RePEc archive at http://mpra.repec.org/. RePEc is an effort trying to improve the dissemination of research in Economics. All its service are free, thanks to a large number of contributors. Visit http://repec.org/ to learn more about RePEc.
Cheers,
Thomas Krichel
http://openlib.org/home/krichel
RePEc:per:1965-06-05:thomas_krichel
skype: thomaskrichel
