"Libraries in the Converging Worlds of Open Data, E-Research, and Web 2.0"

This looks like an interesting article (Libraries in the Converging Worlds of Open Data, E-Research, and Web 2.0, Stuart MacDonald, March/April issue of ONLINE magazine) but I don't have a subscription so I can't really comment much on it. Ironic that the abstract mentions Peter Suber's Open Access News blog.... ;-)

Abstract: "The new forms of research enabled by the latest technologies bring about collaboration among researchers in different locations, institutions, and even disciplines. These new collaborations have two key features -- the prodigious use and production of data. This data-centric research manifests itself in such concepts as e-science, cyberinfrastructure, or e-research. Over the last decade there has been much discussion about the merits of open standards, open source software, open access to scholarly publications, and most recently open data. There are a range of authoritative weblogs that address the open movement, some of which include: 1. DCC's Digital Curation Blog, 2. Peter Suber's Open Access News, and 3. Open Knowledge Foundation Weblog. The data used and produced in e-research activities can be extremely complex, taking different forms depending on the discipline. In the hard sciences, such as biochemistry data can take the form of images and numbers representing the structure of a protein."

Comments

Thanks for the post Glen. You may want to have a look at our current activities through our blogs:
http://oxdrrc.blogspot.com/
http://jisc-datashare.blogspot.com/

Popular posts from this blog

Java, MySql increased performance with Huge Pages

IBM on Linux: "Lean, clean, and green"

Mars Inc. Cacao Genome Database claims Open Access, public domain: falls short