The new issue of the journal - the first in our 14th year of publication 
is online, you can access it now at 
http://informationr.net/ir/14-1/infres141.html

Editorial

With this issue, we are back to a normal scale of operations, although 
'normal' now means quite a load of work in managing the whole process. 
We now mount papers on the site as soon as they are ready, but wait 
until the due date of an issue before publicising. This is also the 
first issue of our fourteenth year of publication, but I think we'll 
hold off any celebration until the fifteenth - perhaps a special issue 
on scholarly communication might be appropriate for Volume 14 No. 1 in 
March, 2010. In fact, take that as an announcement: papers are invited 
for a special issue on scholarly communication to be published in March 
2010. That means we shall need submissions in, let's say, July, August 
and September to get through the refereeing and copy-editing process. 
All aspects of scholarly communication will be welcomed, from the use of 
electronic communication in scientific collaboratories to institutional 
archives, open access publishing, and aspects of traditional print publ!
 ication. Start writing now!

In this issue
All of the papers in this issue have been on the Website since editing 
was completed, so some of them already have a significant number of 
hits. I think this benefits authors, since they have the benefit of 
early 'publication', while the journal retains the regularity of a 
publication programme with quarterly 'issues'. I'll be interested to 
hear from authors as to the benefits, or otherwise, of this approach.

The papers cover a wide variety of topics and we have authors from 
Portugal and Chile, Iceland, France, Finland, South Africa, Taiwan, and 
Canada and the USA. The topics are truly diverse. Three deal with 
information behaviour: Palsdottir reports on a study of health-related 
information behaviour, while Savolainen is concerned with the nature of 
information use, and Meyer reports on information sharing in a 
cross-cultural context. One, by Bo-Christer Björk and his colleagues, 
covers journal publising and the share taken by open access publishing, 
concluding that 4.6% of the 2006 output was immediately available, with 
an additional 3.5% after one year, and 11.3% in repositories or on home 
pages. The remaining four papers deal with evaluating shared virtual 
work space, the use of intelligent agents in environmental scanning, the 
relationship between innovation and IT capability in the financial 
service sector, and the evolution of comparison metrics for indexing 
languages. In other words we seem to have something here for pretty well 
everyone.

Those whose interests aren't catered for by the papers might well find 
something of value in the book reviews. We have ten on this occasion, 
three of which deal with various aspects of Google and its service. We 
also review books on public library management in times of change, a 
guide to reference sources, a festschrift for Professor Peter Brophy, 
information architecture, and designing Web pages with Cascading Style 
Sheets - the latter has led to a new design for the book reviews and may 
influence other parts of the journal.

Finally
I noted in the last editorial that this journal is a collaborative 
effort and could not be published without considerable efforts by a 
large number of people, so I would once again like to thank the 
Associate Editors, the referees and the copy-editors for their efforts, 
as well as our colleagues at Lund who keep the server running!

Tom Wilson
[email protected]


_______________________________________________
Instruções para desiscrever-se por conta própria:
http://listas.ibict.br/cgi-bin/mailman/options/bib_virtual
Bib_virtual mailing list
[email protected]
http://listas.ibict.br/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/bib_virtual

Responder a