Greetings,
On Thursday, June 28, 2001, at 09:42 AM, Tim Ingoldsby wrote:
Steven, PubSCIENCE is not an "archive" - it is a collection of
bibliographic citations and abstracts, similar to (but much less
complete than) already available secondary databases such as INSPEC,
Compendex, Web of Science, Chemical Abstracts, etc. PubSCIENCE also
lacks the rich classification and indexing of these established
databases.
True enough, but the claim from these large established secondaries
would then seems to be that their value-added isn't enough to justify
continuing to pay for their (sometimes quite expensive) products
(or else why threaten PubSCIENCE?). Perhaps the real lesson
is that the gov't should increase spending to better match the
capabilities
of these databases. Or that they should increase R&D (along the lines
of Citeseer) to better automate organizing and indexing metadata.
PubSCIENCE links to the publisher's web site for access to full
text. In my opinion, the demise of PubSCIENCE will have little effect
on the scientific community, given that the OJPS (AIP's Online Journal
Publishing Service that hosts more than 100 of the leading physics and
engineering journals) receives only about 100 link requests from
PubSCIENCE each month. (That figure represents less than 0.08% of the
average monthly link requests coming into the OJPS.)
PubSCIENCE is still in its infancy and is no doubt underutilized.
This statistic is pretty meaningless at this point. What matters
is the potential impact of something like PubSCIENCE in the future,
not its current impact.
Of course, a fully developed PubSCIENCE may be an actual threat
to the secondaries. But if the organization of the literature can
be done more cheaply and made more widely available through
something like PubSCIENCE, then it is in the interest of the
research community to see it happen and this has to come before
the economic interests of the secondaries in my book (largely non-US
companies at that).
This "gov't should not be involved" is a slippery slope. What happens
to funding for:
1) Harvard-Smithsonian's ADS service
2) PubMed, Medline, and PubMedCentral
3) arXiv.org
All of these are more than worthy of gov't support in my opinion
and so is PubSCIENCE. There is no mandate that out-moded
business models should be preserved at all costs. To be
sure this is the real point of attacking PubSCIENCE. SIIA wants
to push us down that slope.
Cheers,
Mark
Mark Doyle
Manager, Product Development
The American Physical Society