Part I of this paper outlined the limitations of feudal academic knowledge exchange and predicted its decline as cross-disciplinary research expands. Part II now suggests the next evolutionary step is democratic online knowledge exchange, run by the academic many rather than the few. Using socio-technical tools it is possible to accept all, evaluate all and publish all academic documents. Editors and reviewers will remain, but their role will change, from gatekeepers to guides. However, the increase in knowledge throughput can only be supported by activating the academic community as a whole. Yet that is what socio-technical systems do --- activate people to increase common gains. Part 1 argued that scholars must do this or be left behind i...
This paper describes the design and implementation of Tiger, a web based manuscript management and p...
This article examines the current difficulties faced in penetrating the world of scholarly communica...
The objective of the scholarly publication is the dissemination of newly researched info...
While current computing practice abounds with innovations like online auctions, blogs, wikis, twitte...
While current computing practice abounds with innovations like online auctions, blogs, wikis, twitte...
The limitations of traditional academic knowledge exchange systems such as conferences and peer-revi...
Internet based services, particularly asynchronous communication services, offer an environment suit...
Internet based services, particularly asynchronous communication services, offer an environment suit...
The Internet is arguably one of the most significant technological developments of the late 20th cen...
Social computing application innovations develop faster than academics theories about them. While on...
This paper will trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the 17th century up to electroni...
Any project in the electronic medium that lays claim to scholarly authority will require adaptations...
Two significant trends in Internet-based production are affecting attitudes and practices in publish...
This paper considers how and why scholarly publishing has changed over the last two decades. It disc...
This paper addresses some of the major shifts in thinking about the nature of publishing and in basi...
This paper describes the design and implementation of Tiger, a web based manuscript management and p...
This article examines the current difficulties faced in penetrating the world of scholarly communica...
The objective of the scholarly publication is the dissemination of newly researched info...
While current computing practice abounds with innovations like online auctions, blogs, wikis, twitte...
While current computing practice abounds with innovations like online auctions, blogs, wikis, twitte...
The limitations of traditional academic knowledge exchange systems such as conferences and peer-revi...
Internet based services, particularly asynchronous communication services, offer an environment suit...
Internet based services, particularly asynchronous communication services, offer an environment suit...
The Internet is arguably one of the most significant technological developments of the late 20th cen...
Social computing application innovations develop faster than academics theories about them. While on...
This paper will trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the 17th century up to electroni...
Any project in the electronic medium that lays claim to scholarly authority will require adaptations...
Two significant trends in Internet-based production are affecting attitudes and practices in publish...
This paper considers how and why scholarly publishing has changed over the last two decades. It disc...
This paper addresses some of the major shifts in thinking about the nature of publishing and in basi...
This paper describes the design and implementation of Tiger, a web based manuscript management and p...
This article examines the current difficulties faced in penetrating the world of scholarly communica...
The objective of the scholarly publication is the dissemination of newly researched info...