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Thursday, July 15, 2004 |
Major development in providing OA to taxpayer-funded research. Rick Johnson, Director of SPARC, just sent this message to SPARC members. I blog it here with his permission.
I want to alert you about an important development. Yesterday the
U.S. House of Representatives Appropriations Committee approved an
important provision in connection with the FY 2005 National Institutes
of Health (NIH) appropriation. The Committee Report accompanying the FY
2005 Labor, HHS, Education and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill
recommends that NIH provide free public access to research articles
resulting from NIH-funded research. The Report calls on NIH to offer
access to authors' final manuscripts (as accepted for journal
publication) and supplemental materials via PubMed Central six months
after publication. If the grantee used NIH funds to pay any publication
charges (e.g., page or color charges, or fees for digital
distribution), PMC access would be immediate. The Report instructs NIH
to inform the Committee by December 1, 2004 how it intends to implement
the policy.
This proposal is a reasoned, incremental step that balances the
interests of taxpayers and publishers. We believe it will enhance the
nation's return on investment in NIH research and contribute to the
translation of bench science into clinical practice.
SPARC and its allies are working to ensure that the proposal is
endorsed in the Senate. In the coming days I will share with you
additional information, including steps you can take to demonstrate
your support.
PS: This is extraordinarily important news. It sensibly focuses on
OA archiving, which leaves authors free to publish in non-OA journals
if they like. It sensibly avoids the mistakes of the Sabo bill, such as
needlessly requiring the public domain rather than open access and
needlessly interfering with patentable discoveries. The NIH is the
largest funder of science in the US federal government, five times
larger than the second-largest funder, the NSF. Expect opposition, and
be prepared to support this proposal through personal and institutional
letters to members of Congress. I'll report further details as I get
them. [Open Access News]
1:33:13 PM Google It!.
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AT&T Wireless to Launch 3G Service Next Week.
CHICAGO (Reuters) - AT&T Wireless Services Inc., the third-largest
U.S. mobile operator, on Thursday said it was on track to launch a
high-speed Internet service for mobile phones this year, and sources
close to the matter said the rollout would begin in four markets early
next week. [Reuters: Technology]
1:27:37 PM Google It!.
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Small Pieces (Not So?) Loosely Joined (and already spammed). Our NMC 2004 Small Pieces
session intended to make a case for creating effective net-based
collaboration using a discrete set of free tools, not so tightly
controlled. This was fine, fun, and (frilly), but I wanted to describe
here how we are trying to implement this for some real work.
We are headed into the 18th year of a faculty-led initiative for instructional technology at Maricopa called "Ocotillo" (see some history and the details on the metaphor).
Dealing with technology, this almost organic organization evolves and
re-invents itself, and just this past year, we "flipped" over a
structure from representing college interests to topical ones (more details than anyone wants).
Anyhow, bottom line, this coming academic year, we will have four
"action groups" each led by a pair of faculty, who will research,
promote, prod, disseminate, dissect, and hopefully engage people in the
areas of:
- Learning Objects
- Hybrid Courses
- ePortfolios
- Emerging Learning Technologies
Being a large, decentralized college system in an ever sprawling
metropolis, I am vigorously promoting using more technology to share,
communicate, and conduct this work, and get us out of the "F2F
meeting/workshop" mode. So while ramping up for our Small Pieces
presentation, I was also cobbling together a system of weblogs, wikis, and discussion boards, tied together with RSS, tape, and bailing wire, and hoping we can spring this effectively on our system this year.
In what will become a long rambling post, I will describe how this all works together. Brian
has already pointed out that this is actually not loosely joined but
rather "tight" (a compliment, I hope). And as an off kilter kind of
success, before even sharing the URL, this morning already got a drug
product spam (MTBlacklist now engaged)...
[cogdogblog]
8:16:41 AM Google It!.
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InfoWorld:
"Google added a new feature to its toolbar this week that allows users
to navigate the Web by typing in a name instead of a URL." [Scripting News]
7:56:56 AM Google It!.
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Looking forward to the report from the UK House of Commons. The Public Library of Science has issued a press release
to anticipate the July 20 release of the House of Commons Science &
Technology Committee report on its inquiry into journal publishing and
open access. Excerpt: "As the second largest research funder in the
world, the decisions of the British government have a global impact on
access to science and medical research results, and will influence U.S.
government policy and legislation....Recent analyses of open access
publishing model by impartial and vested parties such as the Wellcome
Trust have shown it to be cost-effective and sustainable." [Open Access News]
7:54:35 AM Google It!.
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© Copyright 2004 Bruce Landon.
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