On 03/21/2013 03:46 PM, Kingsley Idehen wrote:
On 3/20/13 7:36 AM, Sarven Capadisli wrote:
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

+1

Dog-fooding is important. Basically, exemplify what you seek from
others. The more this is done the easier it will become for others to
appreciate the virtues inherent in Linked Data and its underlying
exploitation of Web Architecture.


You already know how I share my work and try to encourage others to give it a try to do the same. I don't think that's sufficient to win this tough battle.

SW/LD venues and supervisors are not on board. Obeying publisher's demands and sticking to classical ways is the easy route. Why bother right? Most of them neither bother to change or even encourage others to take a forward step.

If research venues simply accepted documents to be submitted using native Web technologies, we'd see things changing hopefully in the right direction (here is me with wishful thinking).

They are keep using that [Linked Data] word, but I do not think it means what they think it means.

Perhaps the incentive to change needs to be worked on.

-Sarven

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