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Judith Schossboeck

Open Access - konsequent oder unverschämt? - 0 views

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    Wo Ergebnisse aus staatlich geförderter Forschung hervorgehen und in Fachzeitschriften mit Peer Review veröffentlicht werden, muss eine parallele, zeitgleiche Veröffentlichung in einer offenen Datenbank möglich sein. Andernfalls wird das Forschungswissen von den Förderern nochmals bezahlt, denn es muss zum Nachlesen zurückgekauft werden.
Parycek

Science and Web 2.0: Talking About Science vs. Doing Science « The Scholarly ... - 0 views

  • There are far too many sessions on journalism and policy, and far too little on doing science . . .
  • “killer app” that integrates social media into the mainstream of science.
  • Tools for doing science are much harder to envision and build.  But these sorts of tools are much more likely to see uptake and use by the community, simply because scientists are more interested in doing science than they are in talking about science.
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  • ScienceBlogs has around 80 regular bloggers. The Nature Network has around 40 blogs that have been updated in the last month (this figure seems to have dropped by 20% since I last checked). David Bradley lists 600-plus “science type” users of Twitter.
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    Science Online 2010, the annual meeting for cutting edge users of Web 2.0 technologies in science, was held last month. It filled the science blogosphere with coverage and allowed far-flung colleagues to meet in person.
Judith Schossboeck

Erstes österreichisches Creative Commons-Buch erschienen - 1 views

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    "Das Wertesystem der Kreativszene hat sich geändert. Aus einem Konkurrenz- ist ein Kooperationsdenken geworden"
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    Von Roland Alton, http://roland.alton.at/, Creative Commons Österreich
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