The Wikimedia Research Newsletter[1] has been using icons for open access[2] / closed access[3] next to each publication. That's an interesting approach that could be adopted in the Julia publications page for easy visual identification of the freely accessible publications, without splitting the list.
On the other hand, it could be interesting to group the papers in the "using Julia" list into common topics; see for example [4]. 1. http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Newsletter#Open_access_vs._closed_access_publications 2. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Open_Access_logo_PLoS_transparent.svg 3. http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Closed_Access_logo_alternative.svg 4. http://dsp.rice.edu/cs On Saturday, March 22, 2014 3:47:19 PM UTC, Andrea Pagnani wrote: > > I do not see the rationale behind splitting papers using Julia into free > and not free journals. In any case I really think that having a fair > representation on what is scientific usage of Julia, could be beneficial > both to developers and a source of inspiration for potential users. > > A > > On Friday, March 21, 2014 9:52:14 PM UTC+1, Ivar Nesje wrote: >> >> 3 sections is appropriate >> * About Julia >> * Using Julia >> * Using Julia, but non free access (if we are going to list those at all). >> >> kl. 21:40:37 UTC+1 fredag 21. mars 2014 skrev Stefan Karpinski følgende: >>> >>> I think we should split the publications page into two sections: papers >>> about Julia at the top and papers using Julia below. >>> >>> >>> On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 4:35 PM, Tobias Knopp >>> <[email protected]>wrote: >>> >>>> At some point we probably should start thinking about initiating a >>>> scientific journal around Julia. >>>> There might be already enough momentum for such a thing given how many >>>> academic people are around here. >>>> >>>> Am Freitag, 21. März 2014 21:17:43 UTC+1 schrieb Isaiah: >>>>> >>>>> Could just use existing Publications page and add categories "About >>>>> Julia" vs "Using Julia" >>>>> >>>>> There's also: http://ieee-hpec.org/2013/index_htm_files/49.pdf (which >>>>> falls somewhere between the two categories) >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> On Fri, Mar 21, 2014 at 4:08 PM, Jonathan Malmaud <[email protected]>wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Ya, that >>>>>> works<http://scholar.google.com/scholar?cites=16121748425115122991&as_sdt=2005&sciodt=0,5&hl=en>. >>>>>> >>>>>> Out of the published papers that use Julia for numeric computing, and >>>>>> cite >>>>>> the main Julia paper, we have >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> - Foulds, James, et al. "Stochastic collapsed variational >>>>>> Bayesian inference for latent Dirichlet allocation." *Proceedings >>>>>> of the 19th ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge >>>>>> discovery and >>>>>> data mining*. ACM, 2013. >>>>>> - Tran, M-N., et al. "Annealed Important Sampling for Models with >>>>>> Latent Variables." *arXiv preprint arXiv:1402.6035* (2014). >>>>>> - Picchini, Umberto, and Julie Lyng Forman. "Accelerating >>>>>> inference for diffusions observed with measurement error and large >>>>>> sample >>>>>> sizes using Approximate Bayesian Computation: A case study." *arXiv >>>>>> preprint arXiv:1310.0973* (2013). >>>>>> - Lin, Dahua. "Online Learning of Nonparametric Mixture Models >>>>>> via Sequential Variational Approximation." *Advances in Neural >>>>>> Information Processing Systems*. 2013. >>>>>> >>>>>> So all machine-learning. Might be cool to maintain a list somewhere >>>>>> for marketing purposes. >>>>>> >>>>>> On Friday, March 21, 2014 11:30:34 AM UTC-7, Ivar Nesje wrote: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I realised that about 10 seconds after pushing send. Strange how >>>>>>> doing something irreversible clears the mind. You might search for >>>>>>> citations of those two papers. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Ivar >>>>>>> >>>>>>> kl. 19:19:11 UTC+1 fredag 21. mars 2014 skrev Jonathan Malmaud >>>>>>> følgende: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Well, those are papers about Julia. I meant papers that just use >>>>>>>> Julia as an implementation language in the course of doing other >>>>>>>> research. >>>>>>>> Sorry for not being clear. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On Friday, March 21, 2014 11:10:12 AM UTC-7, Ivar Nesje wrote: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> It is prominently placed on our homepage: http://julialang.org/ >>>>>>>>> publications/ >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Ivar >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> kl. 19:07:40 UTC+1 fredag 21. mars 2014 skrev Jonathan Malmaud >>>>>>>>> følgende: >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Is someone curating a list somewhere of published work that uses >>>>>>>>>> Julia? >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>> >>>
