Monthly Archives: July 2007

Is Citation Extortion practised?

At ETD2007 one of the delegates related and experience with a publisher – I never got the details. She had submitted a manuscript and been told by the publisher (or editor) that it would not be published unless she included … Continue reading

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The Comprehensive Knowledge Archive Network (CKAN) – Open Knowledge Foundation

Rufus Pollock is a tireless campaigner for Openness. He is a graduate student at Cambridge – “writing up”, but still with enormous energy for other activities in the area of Openness. He is a highly competent hacker – and promotes … Continue reading

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Where the scientific mind is without fear (Totally Retrosynthetic)

This is the title of Totally Restrosynthetic’s lastest post Where the scientific mind is without fear. The post of Peter Murray-Rust about my totallyretrosynthetic blog made me to do this post though I have been very busy lately. (I am … Continue reading

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FINO – Free is Not Open

Bill Hooker of Open Reading Frame has yet again and very clearly expounded the difference between Free and Open. FINO = Free is Not Open What follows may look like the same old arguments. It isn’t! The difference is that … Continue reading

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Making a donkey from a hamburger (XHTML)

Peter Sefton and we are collaborating on tools to create XHTML and other markup languages in a simple environment. But surely there are tools already to manage HTML – it’s ca 15 years old…? Yes, there are tools – and … Continue reading

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Chemistry in MathML and CML – comments?

[warning – WordPress is not very math/chem friendly so forgive formatting] Michael Kohlhase and I are trying to come up with a synthesis of MathML and CML for representing the numerical aspects fo chemistry. By chance we have started with … Continue reading

Posted in chemistry, mkm2007, programming for scientists, XML | 2 Comments

MathML and CML communities

I was delighted to meet old friends from the MathML/OpenMath community last week at Mathematical Knowledge Management 2007 – Patrick Ion, Robert Miner, James Davenport and Michael Kohlhase (apologies to any I have omitted). OpenMath (1993) was one of the … Continue reading

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Open Reading Mashup – would it work for chemistry?

Bill Hooker – a staunch supporter and campaigner for Open Data – has published his first mashup. He queries whether it actually is one – and I tend to agree – but the effect is to bring together different sources … Continue reading

Posted in "virtual communities", blueobelisk, chemistry, open issues | 3 Comments

Blogging in science and mathematics

In a splendid post – reproduced in full (indented) – Kyle Finchsigmate highlights the difference between chemistry and other sciences. WTF is up with the Science blogosphere? 15:11 30/06/2007, Kyle Finchsigmate, sciency politics, The Chem Blog I [i.e. KF] was … Continue reading

Posted in "virtual communities", blueobelisk, mkm2007, open issues, www2007 | 3 Comments