Posts from — January 2004
Mon, 26 Jan 2004 21:21:39 GMT
The need for digital preservation. Scott Carlson, The Uncertain Fate of Scholarly Artifacts in a Digital Age, Chronicle of Higher Education, January 30, 2004 (accessible only to subscribers). Excerpt: Some authors “wonder whether we are entering a digital dark age or a bright new era for scholarship. The raw materials of research — novels, notes, artwork, letters — are being produced on computers and saved on floppy disks and hard drives. Many scholars fear that these materials are in danger of ending up in the junk heap, trapped in obsolete computers. Others say the information age could be an age of plenty, an age when scholars reconceive their habits of research to cope with mountains of data, which then yield bold new discoveries. That future, however, will depend on digital-archiving strategies that are just now being planned. They have not yet been tested, or paid for.” (PS: For an article focusing on the same problem in the sciences, see Robert Dellavalle et al, Going, Going, Gone: Lost Internet References, Science, October 31, 2003. Thanks to Harlan Onsrud.) [Open Access News]
January 26, 2004 No Comments
manage harvard's money, make a fortune
somehow, i don't think that the people who gave to harvard endowment meant for it to be spent like this. imagine if you are a small donor, giving what you can then you hear this? i'd be very upset……. over 100 million…
January 26, 2004 No Comments
what makes a terrorist? e.o. wilson
this is a pretty interesting examination of the question 'what makes a terrorist' i'm not sure that i agree it takes a religion, unless religion can be expanded to include ideology, because certainly many capitalists perpetrate terror in their pursuit of money, likewise environmentalists have been accused, etc. etc.
January 26, 2004 No Comments
Mon, 26 Jan 2004 13:42:23 GMT
'It's just wrong what we're doing'
In an exclusive interview, repentant Vietnam War architect Robert McNamara breaks his silence on Iraq: The United States, he says, is making the same mistakes all over again.
He decided to break his silence on Iraq when I called him up the other day at his Washington office. I told him that his carefully enumerated lists of historic lessons from Vietnam were in danger of being ignored. He agreed, and told me that he was deeply frustrated to see history repeating itself.
“We're misusing our influence,” he said in a staccato voice that had lost none of its rapid-fire engagement. “It's just wrong what we're doing. It's morally wrong, it's politically wrong, it's economically wrong.”
——-
how can it be wrong? doesn't this administration believe that they act under some gods will, etc, etc. while it is the case that any rational person would see the problems and wrongness of the situation, people on religious crusades seem to miss that point because they can't be morally wrong in their own mind.
January 26, 2004 No Comments
Mon, 26 Jan 2004 12:24:27 GMT
January 26, 2004 No Comments
this was the right thing to do
The Blacksburg campus of Virginia Tech is closed on Monday, January 26, due to the snow, ice, and low termperatures. Classes are cancelled and offices are closed. This includes night classes. Check with local media and other sources to determine the status of extended campuses and off-campus offices.
January 26, 2004 No Comments
Mon, 26 Jan 2004 02:38:50 GMT
Gabriel and Eno Start Digital Music Artist Union. An anonymous reader writes “We have long heard stories about how the record companies cheat their own artists with audit techniques that would make Enron … [Slashdot] [Ted Ritzer: Free Music] [A blog doesn't need a clever name]
January 25, 2004 No Comments
piled higher and deeper
great comic, bought the book ages ago.
January 25, 2004 No Comments
power laws again
several people are coming here for the powerlaws abstract. it is here
http://www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy/blog/2003/08/22.html
January 25, 2004 No Comments
Mon, 26 Jan 2004 02:22:37 GMT
New issue of Science & Technology Libraries. The new issue of Science & Technology Libraries (vol. 22, no. 3/4) is now online. Many of its articles are OA-related. Only the TOC and abstracts are free online.
- Paul Ginsparg, Can Peer Review Be Better Focused?
- Michel R. Dagenais, The Future of Scientific and Technical Journals
- Catherine B. Soehner, The eScholarship Repository: A University of California Response to the Scholarly Communication Crisis
- Kimberly Douglas, Conference Proceedings at Publishing Crossroads
- Susan Hall, Electronic Theses and Dissertations: Enhancing Scholarly Communication and Graduate Student Experience
- Dana L. Roth, Chemistry Journals: Cost Effectiveness, Seminal Titles and Exchange Rate Profiteering
- John Cruickshank, The Role of Scientific Literature in Electronic Scholarly Communication
- Kate Thomas, Scholarly Communication in Flux: Entrenchment and Opportunity
- Janet A. Hughes, Issues and Concerns with the Archiving of Electronic Journals
- David Stern, User Expectations and the Complex Reality of Online Research Efforts
- Locke J. Morrisey, Bibliometric and Bibliographic Analsis in an Era of Electronic Scholarly Communication
- Gerry McKiernan, Scholar-Based Initiatives in Publishing
January 25, 2004 No Comments