| OttoBib.com |
| Make a bibliography. It's free, easy and OttoMatic. |
| URL |
ottobib.com |
| Type of site |
metasearch |
| Registration |
no |
| Owner |
jonathanotto.com |
| Created by |
Jonathan Otto |
| Launched |
January 2006 |
| Current status |
operational |
OttoBib.com is a website with a free tool to generate an alphabetized bibliography of books from a list of International Standard Book Numbers (ISBN) with output in MLA, APA, or Chicago/Turabian format.[1] Each query also generates a permalink which can be used to recall the bibliography without reentering the ISBN data. The site is a metasearch engine, integrating data from several sources, including the U.S. Library of Congress API, the Amazon.com database of books, and ISBNdb.com. OttoBib accepts both ISBN-10 and ISBN-13
Background
OttoBib.com was started as a hobby project in 2006 by Jonathan Otto, a 4th year undergraduate at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, USA[2]. It was originally called "That's Crazy Hot!" but the name was quickly changed to OttoBib because the original title was "not suitable for the academic environment and consequently won't take off."[3]
The original inspiration for the site came from Seth Godin's January 3, 2006 blog post on "Stuck Systems", where he wrote:
"A quick online search didn't turn up what seemed obvious to me: a free service that would allow a writer to type in all the ISBNs used in creating a paper and then generate two things:
- 1. a bibliography based on looking up the data onlline and
- 2. a web page that would allow the reader/teacher to see the books, their covers... etc."[4]
Functionality
OttoBib.com performs the two basic functions outlined. Marcus P. Zillman, an Internet information retrieval consultant and speaker said "this website is the start of a new paradigm of citing sources."[5] Jason Clarke, a writer and web developer, said OttoBib is a "tool that solves a simple problem in a simple manner."[6]
Developments
In January 2007, OttoBib introduced a REST interface to allow a citation to be generated from a URL that contains the ISBN. For example, ISBN 0195117972 can be used in the URL:
http://ottobib.com/isbn/0195117972/apa
to display
Patterson, J., (1997). Grand Expectations. Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press.
In February 2007, OttoBib introduced the ability to request citations in BibTeX and Wikipedia {{cite book}} formats.[7]
See also
References
External links
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