We have observed conspicuous changes in the 25 years after Frank M. Bass, John D. C. Little, and Donald G. Morrison begot . benefited from five subsequent editors and fifty different area editors. New submissions grew from 40 to over 320. Published articles grew from 16 to over 45 per year. We discuss six possible developments for the next 25 years. (1) The Internet's extraordinary search capabilities will diminish the distinctiveness of each journal. (2) The Internet will allow any researcher to publish research without journals. (3) Faster dissemination is inevitable. (4) Many economical electronic journals will enter the market. (5) The business model of print journals must change. (6) We will publish new forms of content (e.g., videos, ...
Fifteen years ago we published an article in Solstice: An Electronic Journal of Geography and Mathe...
The consumption of academic journals has radically changed over the past decade, explains the author...
Open access combined with Web 2.0 networking tools is fast changing the traditional journal's functi...
different area editors. New submissions grew from 40 to over 320. Published articles grew from 16 to...
More has changed in journal publishing in the past twenty years than the previous four centuries. Di...
In the years since the launch of the World Wide Web in 1993, there have been profoundly transformati...
For the last 60 years, scholarly journals have witnessed unprecedented growth, controversy and chang...
As we move further into the first decade of a new century, it seems a good point to reflect on where...
Dear readers, The Journal is improving, not only in the means of number and quality of the papers pu...
The information age has brought radical changes to scien-tific publishing. There are far more ways t...
The recent surge in scientific electronic journals began when libraries began having access to the W...
The author discusses the profound technological changes faced by the magazine in the 25 years of pub...
The basic model for scholarly communication in science and technology has remained unchanged for ove...
The problems of information overload from the growth of scholarly literature, and the need to use in...
It may be difficult to imagine that almost half a century ago we used computers far less sophisticat...
Fifteen years ago we published an article in Solstice: An Electronic Journal of Geography and Mathe...
The consumption of academic journals has radically changed over the past decade, explains the author...
Open access combined with Web 2.0 networking tools is fast changing the traditional journal's functi...
different area editors. New submissions grew from 40 to over 320. Published articles grew from 16 to...
More has changed in journal publishing in the past twenty years than the previous four centuries. Di...
In the years since the launch of the World Wide Web in 1993, there have been profoundly transformati...
For the last 60 years, scholarly journals have witnessed unprecedented growth, controversy and chang...
As we move further into the first decade of a new century, it seems a good point to reflect on where...
Dear readers, The Journal is improving, not only in the means of number and quality of the papers pu...
The information age has brought radical changes to scien-tific publishing. There are far more ways t...
The recent surge in scientific electronic journals began when libraries began having access to the W...
The author discusses the profound technological changes faced by the magazine in the 25 years of pub...
The basic model for scholarly communication in science and technology has remained unchanged for ove...
The problems of information overload from the growth of scholarly literature, and the need to use in...
It may be difficult to imagine that almost half a century ago we used computers far less sophisticat...
Fifteen years ago we published an article in Solstice: An Electronic Journal of Geography and Mathe...
The consumption of academic journals has radically changed over the past decade, explains the author...
Open access combined with Web 2.0 networking tools is fast changing the traditional journal's functi...