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Monthly Archives: September 2007
Name that graph (acknowledgements to Rich)
Rich Apodaca has an excellent series of graphs (e.g. Name That Graph) where he has removed key annotations (titles, units, axes, etc.) I’m not going to to steal his theme but there is one graph that I hope my readership … Continue reading
Posted in ahm2007, data
3 Comments
Peter Murray-Rust: Prospect and Nessie and OSCAR
I am delighted to congratulate the Royal Society of Chemistry on their award for Project Prospect. Prospect is one of the first examples of true semantic publishing. We’re pleased to have been closely involved – 5 years ago David James … Continue reading
Posted in semanticWeb
1 Comment
change because old scientists die
Tobias Kind has asked (Comment to Nature Protocols: How much can we re-use?) why shouldn’t require chemists to submit data… Hi Peter, making chemistry data machine-readable is not the business of the publisher! It’s the business of the chemists themselves … Continue reading
Posted in data, open issues, semanticWeb, XML
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Nature Protocols: How much can we re-use?
In my last post (Nature: How much content can our robots access?) I asked general questions about what data, if any, in a scientific article publishers would not allow humans and robots to use without permission. So, as an example, … Continue reading
Posted in open issues
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Nature: How much content can our robots access?
In this blog ( Copyrighted Data: replies [1], Wiley and eMolecules: unacceptable; an explanation would be welcome –[2] , and elsewhere we have been discussing the “copyright” of factual information, or “data”. In [2] I ask a major publisher whether … Continue reading
Posted in open issues
1 Comment
PRISM: Cambridge UP distances itself
As readers will know I have written Open letters to publishers with whom I have a connection about their connection with PRISM. I am pleased to report that I have a clear response from CUP, the University’s press. Interestingly – … Continue reading
Posted in open issues
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AHM2007: Best paper (Jon Blower) – Virtual globes Hurricanes and penguins
Jon Blower was awarded the best paper at AHM2007 . This is an an outstanding example of escience where SIMPLE technology is brought to bear on multiple datasets, each of which by themselves does not carry a message but the … Continue reading
Posted in ahm2007, open issues, XML
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PRISM: Nature distances itself
I have been concerned about the membership of PRISM and, specifically, UK and other European publishers who might be associated, perhaps incorrectly, with the initiative. I hadn’t got around to writing to Nature Publishing Group (who have been an enthusiastic … Continue reading
Posted in open issues
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DBPedia2: major opportunity for semantic web (including chemistry)
I have blogged about the exciting potential of DBPedia before ( dbchem” href=”http://wwmm.ch.cam.ac.uk/blogs//?p=316″>dbpedia – structured information from Wikipedia => dbchem). It is a semistructured RDF triple collection created automatically from Wikipedia. The really exciting thing is that huge numbers of … Continue reading
Posted in ahm2007, semanticWeb
6 Comments
UK eScience All Hands 2007
I’m at the UK eScience All Hands Meeting – the sixth – and I think I have been to all. The meeting is closely, but not completely, coupled to the UK’s pioneering investment in eScience (roughly equivalent US term is … Continue reading
Posted in ahm2007
3 Comments