Hi Paul, thanks for the notice!

Looks like PeerJ is 50 steps ahead of the "state of the art" SW / LD research venues. Most definitely in the right direction.

I'd be content with venues saying "You may submit your research by proving its URI : HTML(+RDFa)" for starters.

-Sarven

On 03/21/2013 12:20 PM, Paul Groth wrote:
I don't know if it's exactly what Sarven wants but PeerJ
(https://peerj.com) publishes great looking html based papers and with
RDF metadata for all their papers. It's also open access.

Thanks
Paul


On Wed, Mar 20, 2013 at 1:11 PM, Andrea Splendiani
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Hi,

    Cannot answer your first question, but I think the idea is worth
    exploring.
    You would need a few things:
    1) A guarantee that the content at the page doesn't change without
    notice, so that comments/judgements refer to the correct thing. You
    can use some checksum-based method for this.
    2) Some consistent format and annotation, to facilitate search. Not
    only from a computational perspective, we rely on some pattern
    (abstract/methods/result) to quickly scan some artifact. So ok, we
    can have some guidelines the research paper need to comply to (so we
    need a sort of validator).
    3) Some guarantee of persistency. That could be supplemented by an
    established archives that can resolve dead URLs....
    4) A peer review sort of system, that in this case could be
    post-publication, maybe coupled with some new metrics.
    5) A selection criteria could be useful as well.

    I'm sure you know: http://figshare.com. They store different things
    (not executable), but no peer-review associated.
    For executable content, beside Javacript&webby thing, it could make
    sense to publish virtual machines these days.

    best,
    Andrea


    Il giorno 20/mar/2013, alle ore 11:36, Sarven Capadisli
    <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
      ha scritto:

     > Dear community,
     >
     > I would like to know which venues (e.g., conferences, journals)
    are out there that accepts research documents in
    (X)HTML+CSS+JavaScript+MathML+SVG etc. as the primary and final
    format. On that note, which accepts an HTTP URI of the research?
     >
     > As far as I know, there are none out there, but I want to be
    wrong about this!
     >
     > What I'm hoping for are a bunch of things:
     >
     > Although not ultimately necessary, a venue to submit to that
    would have some weight given "reviewed and approved" stamps.
     >
     > Not being at the mercy of classical publishers needs when it
    comes to sharing knowledge given the technologies that we have at
    our disposal.
     >
     > In the absence of such forward-looking venues, I would love to
    see an open discussion on what's really needed to make it happen and
    be it the default approach when it comes to sharing research
    findings. Pragmatic approaches are always welcome, so, this doesn't
    have to be about "how to we make all scholarly publishing get on the
    Web?", but rather for starters, "how do we make scholarly work of
    Linked Data and Semantic Web researchers and practitioners get on
    the Web"?
     >
     > I don't mean to belittle or overlook the hard work that some
    groups are already actively involved in e.g., Semantic Web Journal,
    Semantic Web Dog Food, FORCE11. I'm merely looking for more out of
    this community.
     >
     > For those that this sounds desirable, please voice yourself
    because there are indeed many like you!
     >
     > Humbly yours,
     >
     > -Sarven
     > http://csarven.ca/#i
     >





--
--
Dr. Paul Groth ([email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>)
http://www.few.vu.nl/~pgroth/
Assistant Professor
- Knowledge Representation & Reasoning Group |
   Artificial Intelligence Section | Department of Computer Science
- The Network Institute
VU University Amsterdam



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