Author Archives: pm286

What sort of repositories do we want?

  I had the pleasure of meeting Greg Crane in Phoenix (see below) and last week at our brainstorm on how to fund digital curation. Greg is a remarkable person – a classicist who is compleetely at home creating computer … Continue reading

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Open Access Data, Open Data Commons PDDL and CCZero

This is great news. We now have a widely agreed protocol for Open Data, channeled through Science Commons but with great input for several sources including Talis, and the Open Knowledge Foundation. Here is the OKFN report (I also got … Continue reading

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Deepak Singh: Educating people about data ownership

Deepak Singh: Educating people about data ownership I never got to watch the Bubble 2.0 video (I only heard it on net@nite). Before I could get to see it, it got taken down. Wired talks about the reasons behind the … Continue reading

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Tools, Frameworks and Applications

I lamented the lack of public interest shown by the pharma companies in Open Source software and Geoff Hutchison commented: When the Blue Obelisk met in San Francisco, we all heard from a pharma rep [PMR: was there a pharma … Continue reading

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Why oh why oh why….? Digital uncuration

var imagebase=’file://C:/Program Files/FeedReader30/’; My colleague Nico Adams has written at great and useful length (Why oh why oh why….? ) about the appalling state of data capture, dissemination, preservation and curation.  He describes how he found some very valuable data … Continue reading

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The unacceptable state of Chemoinformatics

Egon Willighagen has cricitized a numner of aspects of chemoinformatics: (I don’t blame Individuals in Commercial Chemoinformatics). This post was sparked off by an announcement that company A had agreed with company B that A would use B’s software. This … Continue reading

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HypoScience

I have blogged earlier (cyberscience: Changing the business model for access to data) on the lack of access to data in cyberscience – there may be a data deluge in some areas but there is a drought in many others. … Continue reading

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Digital CurationDay – end

The DCC finished with the customary summing up – state-of-the… – presentation by Cliff Lynch. Cliff’s talks are always entertaining – no visuals so you actually have to listen to the words. [(That’s not a bad thing. I’m thinking of … Continue reading

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Digital Curation Day 2 – Jane Kwok and SCOPE

For me the highlight of the late morning session was Jane Hunter and colleagues (Queensland) describing their SCOPE system of managing Compound Document Objects (CDO’s). Jane is a materials scientist turned informaticist (hope that’s fair) and we’d already been partners … Continue reading

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Digital Curation day 2 – Carole on workflows

There is a definitely an air of optimism in the conference – we know the taks are hard and very very diverse but it’s clear that many of them are understood.  The morning plenary was Carole Goble, Manchester – who … Continue reading

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