In what became 5th most-read new post on LessWrong in 2012, Morendil told us about a study widely cited in its field... except that source cited, which isn't online and is really difficult to get, makes a different claim — and turns out to not even be the original research, but a PowerPoint presentation given ten years after the original study was published!
Fortunately, the original study turns out to be freely available online, for all to read; Morendil's post has a link. The post also tells us the author and the year of publication. But that's all: Morendil didn't provide a list of references; he showed how the presentation is usually cited, but didn't give a full citation for the original study.
The link is broken now. The Wayback machine doesn't have a copy. The address doesn't give hints about the study's title. I haven't been able to find anything on Google Scholar with author, year, and likely keywords.
I rest my case.
I couldn't find this quickly: What's the Markdown and HTML for adding tooltips?
In Markdown, it goes like
[displayed text](hyperlink "tooltip alt text")
; in HTML I think it's an additional argument to<a>
or<href>
which goestitle="tooltip alt text"
, so for my example above:Markdown:
[paranoid archiving for Internet links](http://www.gwern.net/Archiving%20URLs "'Archiving URLs', gwern 2013")
HTML:
<a href="http://www.gwern.net/Archiving%20URLs" rel="nofollow" title="'Archiving URLs', gwern 2013">paranoid archiving for Internet links</a>