If you went to the Open Source/Open Notebook session on Saturday or checked the podcast (linked in there) of it, you are probably familiar with some of the ideas revolutionizing the science publishing world.
One of the people on the forefront of thinking about these questions is Bill Hooker who just finished the third part of his trilogy guest-blogging on 3 Quarks Daily. Just in case you missed the first two installments, here are the links to all three – but take your time and check out the numerous links embedded in them:
The Future of Science is Open, Part 1: Open Access
The Future of Science is Open, Part 2: Open Science
The Future of Science is Open, Part 3: An Open Science World
My Homepage
My homepage is at http://coturnix.org. It is temporarily stripped to minimal information, but more will come soon.Grab my RSS feed:
-
Join 1,499 other subscribers
Search This Blog:
Archives
Categories
Recent Comments:
Bora Zivkovic on Morning at Triton Angie Lindsay Ma on Morning at Triton Linda chamblee on Morning at Triton Jekyll » Blog… on The Big Announcement, this tim… Mike H on The Big Announcement, this tim… -
Recent Posts
Top Posts
- Clock Tutorial #16: Photoperiodism - Models and Experimental Approaches
- Save the Mountain Walrus
- Biology and the Scientific Method
- BIO101 - Protein Synthesis: Transcription and Translation
- Chick Development Series
- DonorsChoose 2008 Challenge - update 4
- Unity without U is nity - Angela Shelton at #140conf (video)
- DonorsChoose - prizes
- BIO101 - From Two Cells To Many: Cell Differentiation and Embryonic Development
- Ready for College!
@BoraZ on Twitter:
Tweets by BoraZCC licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.PayPal

Sitemeter






Thanks for the plug!
The articles are too long, I now think, but they do at least link to most of the important people and resources in Open Science. (I was especially pleased to end with a description of Jean-Claude Bradley’s Open Notebook work, since first and last paragraphs are what readers mostly remember!)
The future of science is NOT open. The American Chemical Society is working with nasty PR companies to put that to an end.
http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070122/full/445347a.html