Bioline was set up in 1993 as a result of an increasingly loud rumble of dissatisfaction among scientists about the way research information was (or was not) distributed. The rumble reached a crescendo at a biotechnology/ bioinformatics conference in Trieste, Italy at which Professor Joshua Lederberg (winner of the 1958 Noble Prize in Medicine) deplored the growing gap between the cost of learned journals and the budgets of libraries to purchase them (Branin and Case, 1998). This problem was recognised as being particularly pronounced for research institutions in developing countries (Ginsparg, 1996). At the same time, the appearance of a possible means of using information technology and communications (ICT) set the research community thin...