Jonathan Eisen demonstrates with a personal example.
First he did a keyword search for the topic of his interest and expertise. Then he read a paper that came up in the search. Then he rated the paper and left a brief comment with the rating.
Then he came back to his blog, wrote in more detail and linked back to the paper itself.
In other related news: Pedro takes a quick look at last week’s first two days of ratings.
Bjoern looks at competition in science and how Open Access can help alleviate it.
Bill Hooker discovers another Open Notebook Science example – a PhD thesis being written on a blog by Jeremiah Faith.
Finally, a very good and important discussion by Bill abot what does and what does not constitute Open Access.
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
- ScienceOnline2010 - interview with Tara Richerson
- Biophilia? Not what E.O.Wilson had in mind!
- BIO101 - From Two Cells To Many: Cell Differentiation and Embryonic Development
- Sharks down => Rays up => Scallops down
- Scienceblogging: LabSpaces – a Q&A with Brian Krueger
- Strange Search Queries...
- Two new posts on the SciAm Guest Blog
- ClockQuotes
- ScienceOnline2011 – interview with Seth Mnookin
- Congratulations to Karen James!
@BoraZ on Twitter:
Tweets by BoraZCC licence

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

Sitemeter





