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Re: The House of Cards
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: The House of Cards
- From: Gene Sprouse <sprouse@ridge.aps.org>
- Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2008 18:39:36 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Sandy's reference to Physical Review growing at the speed of light is a classic among physicists. To address the information overload problem that he mentions, we are starting a new online publication, simply called "Physics". Each of the 18,000 articles we publish in a year is important to at least a small group of specialists, but there are some articles that every physicist should know about. To help readers find and understand these gems, "Physics" will highlight a few outstanding articles each week by means of an introduction (called a "Viewpoint" ) written by a respected expert at a level accessible to all physicists and physics students. We are in beta test now (take a look at http://physics.aps.org ). We will officially roll out the site on September 15. "Physics" and the target articles of the "Viewpoints" will be free for the foreseeable future, as a service to the physics community. Gene D. Sprouse Editor in Chief, American Physical Society On Aug 19, 2008, at 6:06 PM, Sandy Thatcher wrote: > Green OA is certainly proliferating, I agree, and there are more > Gold OA journals joining the pack every day. No question that OA > is a success, if you mean by success an increase in the number of > publishing outlets and in the accessibility of journal articles. > But does anyone really know if this means that the quality of > knowledge has increased? What this world doesn't need is more > stuff to wade through to find the good stuff worth spending one's > time reading. I am reminded of an article in Physics Today back > in 1988 that observed that at its then current rate of growth the > Physical Review would soon fill library shelves at a speed faster > than that of light, but that this didn't contradict the theory of > relativity because no information was being conveyed! > > Sandy Thatcher > Penn State Press > >> I cannot resist agreeing strongtly with Stevan Harnad on this >> point. The Green Road and its future is anything but bleak, >> judging from the REALITY of its present and the speed of its >> progress. The gold road is progressing rapidly too as I can >> witness at close range here in Brazil where I am a guest >> professor right now. Just look at SciELO. In short, it is Mr. >> Esposito's sense of reality that is in question, not Stevan >> harnad's or mine... >> >> Jean-Claude Guedon
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