Kia ora Eric,

It presumably depends on your browser's capabilities: when I click the PDF 
links here, it opens up a page on which the PDF is embedded and I can read it 
straight away after a single click. For me that's more convenient than 
downloading it and having to open it in a PDF reader, then for the next article 
close the PDF reader and switch back to the browser, and later having to 
declutter my downloads folder. For people with browsers with fewer bells and 
whistles (or for machine input like your program) there's that extra click, but 
everything is trade-offs.

I expect the OJS project would take feedback on better ways to architect their 
software though. (Probably more reluctantly if it involved massive database 
changes, but still...)

Deborah

From: Code for Libraries <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Eric Lease 
Morgan
Sent: Sunday, 26 July 2020 1:23 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Publishing announcement of Special Issue on AI, Machine 
Learning, Data Science, and Libraries

[...]
> https://journal.calaijol.org/index.php/ijol<https://journal.calaijol.org/index.php/ijol>
[...]

Yongming, thank you for bringing this to our attention. AI in libraries is a 
hot topic, for sure. I sincerely look forward to looking them over.

To anybody or everybody, let's suppose I wanted to read the whole issue of the 
journal described above. How many clicks does it require to get the content? In 
this case, the answer is 2 times the number of articles, or 3 times the number 
of articles if I go through the DOI. The answer is at least 18, if not 27. 
Furthermore, answer me this. What are the URLs pointing to the PDF versions of 
the articles described above?

"C'mon, Eric, don't be a jerk. Eighteen clicks is not so bad, especially when 
you get the content for free." And my reply is, "It is not really the number of 
clicks. Instead it is about conflation." The URLs to these things -- as well as 
in many many many things across the 'Net -- are conflated. The 'Net overflows 
with "not here but there" messages; the 'Net overflows with "dummies" as they 
used to be called in libraries. You know, those wooden blocks put on library 
shelves that say, "This book has been moved to the Reserve Book Room until 
further notice." The dummies were frustrating.

I'm sorry, but the utter truth is links break. The problem only gets compounded 
when identifiers need to be resolved or splash ("landing") pages get put in the 
way.

I assert few people will read all of the articles in any journal if they have 
to click through 18 different times in order to read/download the documents. I 
assert even fewer people will read the whole of a conference proceedings. 
Remember when conference proceedings where distributed in a single volume, and 
you could easily peruse through the whole thing? We can still have such a 
thing, if the links were managed differently.

In short, I wish sites wouldn't tease me all along the way, and don't make me 
hunt for the download link from the landing page. Give me the link to the 
thing, not a surrogate. "Save the time of the reader."

P.S. I "read" the issue, and I put the results here:

https://carrels.distantreader.org/library/ai-in-libraries/<https://carrels.distantreader.org/library/ai-in-libraries>

--
Eric Morgan
University of Notre Dame

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