Thanks James. Looking forward to more ideas:
Actually, to my list I forgot to add
IR conferences. Yet another bunch that I know nothing about,
but I am interested to hear more.
Best regards
Dana
On Oct 12, 2011, at 12:03 PM, James Fuller wrote:
On Wed, Oct 12, 2011 at 8:03 PM, Daniela Florescu
<[email protected]> wrote:
Dear all,
I am having a problem right now, and I don't know how to solve it.
We had over the summer several outstanding students, who did
really great research in processing XML and XQuery.
Here comes the question. Where can we publish the result of this
research
!?
http://www.springer.com/computer/database+management+%26+information+retrieval/book/978-3-642-03554-8
http://www.springer.com/computer/database+management+%26+information+retrieval/book/978-3-540-30951-2
In my mind Balisage is the natural for this, but we could orientate
things now that we have moved XML Prague to University of Ekonomics
... perhaps there is value in a compiled journal from several
conferences/sources (XML Summer School et al) ?
2. Database conferences.
I dont think so ... many of these guys are being forced to accept
polystructured data ... my feeling is this are is probably the logical
container for these kind of papers.
So they'll not understand the XQuery new work, let alone publish it.
agreed, but I its a pretty broad tent with lots of outlets for
publishing, some who may consider
3. Functional programming conferences (after all, XQuery is a
functional
language..). Maybe it's a choice !?
I have no experience, but I am interested to hear if anybody else
has.
fp bulk existence is in academic form and perhaps its time to welcome
xquery 3.0 to them ... they would probably support a language with a
gentle learning curve, etc.
4. WWW Conference. Based on my experience, it's such a wide
conference ---
it's like a conference on water
-- where do you start !? As a result the audience, as well as the
program
committee, is interested in widely different
things (and XML/XQuery might not be one of them, and then you are
out of
luck)
agreed too broad, but as an activity to get the word out about xquery
probably useful to attempt to go
5. NoSQL conferences. Unfortunately, there are two problems. First,
NoSQL is
still not accepted in academic conferences
-- they have the same problem as XML itself. And second, they try
to stay
away from XML like crazy ("angle brackets, not cool,man, not cool.
Not Web
scale.").
I believe we should be at these conferences, if not because NoSQL
crowd is about to have their own 'query wars' and it will be good to
be near (but on the sidelines of this).
So, I am interested in your feedback.
will send more thoughts after the weekend.
J
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