PLoS Launches Open Access Biology Journal
Vojtek writes "An international grass-roots organization of scientists is lauching an open access journal, PLoS Biology, that will compete with existing publications. See PLoS.org for details. Read their FAQ, download and post their Poster, support their cause!" We've done several previous stories about these guys - this one is pretty thorough.
Sounds like slashdot. :-)
PLoSdot.org?
+.
--"The perfect example of the man of action is the suicide." - William Carlos Williams
Except, where are the journals? I couldn't find either of their journals on their website. I am very interested in them however. I'm sure peices published in that journal will not be funded by large companies or groups and will probably be more theoretical, and possibly more impracticle.
http://github.com/gbook/nidb
hopefully it will work out. There are so many hurdles to overcome. It has to gain popularity and now deal with all this censorship brewha that has come in teh sciences post 9/11.
Personally, i think that open journals are the way to go. It just seem rediculous that people can't learn about stuff becuase the cost is porhibitively high, but i guess that really isn't anything new. Nevertheless, it sux, and hopefull this jounal will help end this.
SWEEET!
Aren't open journals best kept to the internet? Where they can be easily edited and veiwed by all in real time?
It's a good idea though
"Trying is the first step towards failure" - Homer Simpson
Are people too cool to tell us what acronyms mean? How fucking hard it is to write Public Library of Science?
It wasn't supposed to end up this way.
Finding articles has begun to become a real big problem. Cheap universities cut down on subscriptions. My place of work, the University of Stockholm, canceled all science journals at the main library this year Online periodicals are still very expensive.
The problem with free online journals is getting an ISSN number for your journal. Without this, it is not even counted as a publication, and won't appear in any reference databases. To get an ISSN, the journal has to be printed and submitted to something like 50 libraries.
So, to publish an online journal you still have to kill trees...
PLOS only addresses free access. But it does not address the real hairy problem, the lack of peer-review in science and the abscence of free publication. PLOS still hangs on the obsolete idea that science must be censored to be good. Yes, censored, because there can be no re-view before publication, and because the decision is the editor's, not author's peer (most never find out!). What the scientific stablishment calls ``peer review'' is truly called censorship.
PLOS is better than the parasitic `scientific' journals, but it's not good enough. Too little, too late.
``L'imagination au povoir.''
People should use the ABBR tag like so:
Example: PLoS
Code: <ABBR title="Public Library of Science">PLoS</ABBR>
Hovering over PLoS above should show the acronym's expansion (update: actually slashcode doesn't even allow ABBR tags! so the above doesn't work). However it is obvious why people don't use the ABBR tag; acronyms are there because they save people time so why on earth waste even more time by writing the acronym, it's expanded form and some miscelaneous markup!
I'd like to see Slashdot automatically add ABBR tags for known acronyms like OSS, KDE, CSS etc. Maybe I should submit the concept? I'm already instigating a system to do this for my personal web journal..