The tenth Q&A in a series exploring the current state of Open Access has
been published, this time with IEEE's Anthony Durniak. 

 

Durniak leads the professional staff that operate IEEE's publishing and
online information services. He is also responsible for IEEE Spectrum, the
organisation's flagship monthly magazine of technology trends and insight,
and The Proceedings of the IEEE, the organisation's leading scholarly
journal.

 

Incorporated in 1896, and headquartered in New York City, IEEE (The
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) is a non-profit
corporation and professional association. It has more than 425,000 members
in more than 160 countries. Membership consists of engineers, scientists,
and allied professionals whose technical interests are rooted in electrical
and computer sciences, engineering, and related disciplines.

 

IEEE publishes around 160 journals, magazines and conference proceedings
from the more than 1,300 conferences and workshops it holds each year. As
such, it publishes nearly a third of the world's technical literature in
electrical engineering, computer science, and electronics. IEEE is,
therefore, a scholarly publisher, although not a commercial publisher but a
learned society. 

 

Where does IEEE currently stand on Open Access? Read the Q&A to find out:

 

http://poynder.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/ieees-anthony-durniak-on-state-of-open
.html

 

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