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Monthly Archives: October 2007
Indexing Open Access and Free Access articles
I reported that Chemspider had been asked to take down indexes of scientific articles (based presumably on chemical names) and stated that I did not think this was reasonable. (My language was probably rather more heated – I shall choose … Continue reading
Posted in open issues
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Open-Data-driven science and a brokering system for ONS
Cameron Neylon and Jean-Claude Bradley have blogged about a directory of Open Notebook Science (ONS) where projects including this approach can register. Growing a community – Open Notebook Science directories 21:19 14/10/2007, Cameron Neylon, As has been flagged up by … Continue reading
Posted in blueobelisk, data, open issues, open notebook science
6 Comments
ODOSOS and an article on OA
Egon reminds us of the importance of the intensity of purpose that we need in the Blue Obelisk. (ODOSOS is our mantra: Open Data, Open Source, Open Standards). I won’t add very much new to that but I’ll also add … Continue reading
Posted in blueobelisk, open issues
1 Comment
Fun graph
I love Rich Apodaca’s idea of “name that graph” (example). I am not competing, but just occasionally a bit of fun: Shouldn’t be hard
Posted in fun, puzzles
8 Comments
ACS: Why it matters
I have posted as an outsider why I am concerned about the current state of governance at ACS, particularly with regard to truth and integrity in the scholarly process. You may ask “why is this Brit slagging off a society … Continue reading
Posted in open issues
1 Comment
OPSIN/OSCAR: you + us = we; please help
I’m exploring how you and we may be able to work to improve OSCAR and OPSIN. Even if you aren’t interested in chemical names, you may find the general principles useful. One of the drawbacks of full Open Source and … Continue reading
Posted in chemistry, open issues, oscar, programming for scientists, XML
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The thing about Wikipedia is that it only works in practice. In theory, it can never work.
A correspondent asked my opinion about Freebase: This blog entry may be of interest, about Freebase a collaborative database project which may or may not be open. Are you familiar with it? http://brianna.modernthings.org/article/20/freebase-wikipedia-and-the-right-to-fork Also see http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/09/technology/09data.html?ex=1331096400&en=a87d4f61e6052888&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss I must admit to … Continue reading
Posted in data, open issues
4 Comments
OPSIN: why we need it and why we shouldn't
NOTE: even if you are not a chemist, this should be worth reading… Rich Apodaca evangelises the value of JRuby as a simple way of glueing together the Java offerings in our Open toolkit. Here he shows how easy it … Continue reading
Posted in open issues
4 Comments
My outrage against "Open Access Publisher" continues
[Peter Suber, I’d be grateful if you could comment on what it is legal to index without publishers’ permission. And what it is reasonable to expect from someone who labels themselves an Open Access publisher.] In my post Outrage: Repurposing … Continue reading
Posted in chemistry, open issues
5 Comments
Open NMR
As I have already blogged (WWMM calculation of spectra) we are hoping to provide Jean-Claude Bradley and others an Open service to calculate NMR spectra from structure. This needs a lot of software components and a lot of glueware. With … Continue reading