2025 June 17
Evolving the preprint evaluation world with Sciety
This post is based on an interview with Sciety team at eLife.
Just in case anybody may not have seen this, hereâs the testimony of Sir Tim Berners-Lee yesterday before a House of Representatives Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet. Required reading.
(Via this post yesterday in the Save the Internet blog.)
Thereâs a great exposition of FRBR (the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records model âwork -> expression -> manifestation -> itemâ) in this post from The FRBR Blog on De Revolutionibus as described in The Book Nobody Read: Chasing the Revolutions of Nicolaus Copernicus by Owen Gingerich. See post for the background and here (103 KB PNG) for a map of the FRBR relationships.
(Yes, and a twinkly star in the title too. ;~)
Not specifically publishing-related, but here is a fun rant interview with Alan Kay titled The PC Must Be RevampedâNow.
My favorite bitâŠ
ââŠin the last few years Iâve been asking computer scientists and programmers whether theyâve ever typed E-N-G-E-L-B-A-R-T into Google-and none of them have. I donât think you could find a physicist who has not gone back and tried to find out what Newton actually did. Itâs unimaginable. Yet the computing profession acts as if there isnât anything to learn from the past, so most people havenât gone back and referenced what Engelbart thought. â
Update: All apologies to Google. Apparently this was a problem at our end which our IT folks are currently investigating. (And I thought it was just me. đ
Just managed to get this page:
_âGoogle Error
Weâre sorryâŠ
⊠but your query looks similar to automated requests from a computer virus or spyware application. To protect our users, we canât process your request right now.
Weâll restore your access as quickly as possible, so try again soon. In the meantime, if you suspect that your computer or network has been infected, you might want to run a virus checker or spyware remover to make sure that your systems are free of viruses and other spurious software.
The info registry has now added in the InChI namespace (see registry entry here) which now means that chemical compounds identified by InChIs (IUPACâs International Chemical Identifiers) are expressible in URI form and thus amenable to many Web-based description technologies that use URI as the means to identify objects, e.g. XLink, RDF, etc. As an example, the InChI identifier for naphthalene is
InChI=1/C10H8/c1-2-6-10-8-4-3-7-9(10)5-1/h1-8H
and can now be legitimately expressed in URI form as
info:inchi/InChI=1/C10H8/c1-2-6-10-8-4-3-7-9(10)5-1/h1-8H
Rob Cornelius has a practical little demo of using Yahoo! pipes against some Ingenta feeds.
Like Tony, I keep experiencing speed/stability problems while accessing pipes so I havenât yet become a crack-pipes-head.
Jon Udell interviews Dan Chudnov about OpenURL, see his blog entry: âA conversation with Dan Chudnov about OpenURL, context-sensitive linking, and digital archivingâ. The podcast of the interview is available here.
Interesting to see these kind of subjects beginning to be covered by a respected technology writer like Jon. As he says in his post:
âI have ventured into this confusing landscape because I think that the issues that libraries and academic publishers are wrestling with â persistent long-term storage, permanent URLs, reliable citation indexing and analysis â are ones that will matter to many businesses and individuals. As we project our corporate, professional, and personal identities onto the web, weâll start to see that the long-term stability of those projections is valuable and worth paying for.â
From the OASIS Press Release:
âBoston, MA, USA; 13 February 2007 â OASIS, the international standards consortium, today announced that its members have approved version 1.1 of the Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) as an OASIS Standard, a status that signifies the highest level of ratification.â
February 5, 2007, Washington DC Crossref invited a number of people to attend an information gathering session on the topic of Author IDs. The purpose of the meeting was to determine:
About whether there is an industry need for a central or federated contributor id registry;
whether Crossref should have a role in creating such a registry;
how to proceed in a way that builds upon existing systems and standards.
Kim Cameron, Microsoftâs Identity Czar and member of the Identity Gang, comments on Microsoftâs announcement that they will support OpenID. Another sign that federated identity schemes are gaining traction and OpenID is likely to emerge as a standard the publishers are going to want to grapple with soon.
This follows Doc Searlâs comments on the notion of âCreator Relationship Managementâ where he speculates that the techniques being used in federated identity schemes and the Creative Commons can be combined to create a new âsilo-freeâ value chain amongst creators, producers and distributors.
Destacando nuestra comunidad en Colombia
2025 June 05