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Distributed Publishing: Delivering publisher-neutral information to the research community

Distributed Publishing: Delivering publisher-neutral information to the research community. Anne Dixon Assistant Director TERENA 98 6th October 1998 annedixon@ioppublishing.co.uk, http//:www.iop.org. Products & Services in the portfolio. Growth rates 1995-98 3 to 14 people

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Distributed Publishing: Delivering publisher-neutral information to the research community

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  1. Distributed Publishing: Delivering publisher-neutral information to the research community Anne DixonAssistant DirectorTERENA 98 6th October 1998 annedixon@ioppublishing.co.uk, http//:www.iop.org

  2. Products & Services in the portfolio Growth rates 1995-98 3 to 14 people 5-fold financial investment increase no. products - increase 33-87% per year accesses per year: 0.25M - c.7M Decision-making much tighter re-charged costs outsourcing - x2/3/4 more

  3. Product types • Experimental • Maintenance/upgrade • Freely available • Paid for • Subcontracted work • Internal

  4. The Big Picture • All products from 1.1.96 to start 99 • 28% Freely available • 27% Maintenance/Upgrades • 17% Internal Services • 14% Sub-contracted work • 13% Paid for • 1% Experimental • Will have launched 95 products in less than 4 years

  5. 3 phases of STM Publishing • 1st: digitised or electro-copies • 2nd: alter to include digital capabilities • 3rd: linking and context

  6. Different Approaches • Critical mass is vital: the TOTAL DATABASE solution • Intermediaries & one-stop-shops: the GATEWAY solution • The GATEWAY-COMMUNITY solution • DISTRIBUTED PUBLISHING: ensure that any visitor to any site can easily reach all important knowledge pointers

  7. Benefits for Researchers • Guarantee of quality • Follow another’s thought processes • Forward and backward reference trails • Huge savings in time & effort • No need to keep great lists of bookmarks • Monopolies less likely

  8. Examples of Distributed Publishing • IoPP’s HyperCite - www.iop.org • APS’s Link Manager - www.aps.org • ADS - adswww.harvard.edu • Chemport - www.chemport.org

  9. “Rules” of Distributed Publishing • Participants establish no technology barriers • Participants share standards & protocols • Make no charge for sending visitors to another site • Participants each retain responsibility for all business aspects of the enterprise, within their own site • Participants agree minimum service levels for all users

  10. Horizontal and Vertical extensions • Horizontal - more content providers buy in to concept • Vertical - STACKS • STACKS - pushed or pulled top-level data with embedded URLs/similar

  11. STACKS • Journals tables of contents • Push/pull by email/ftp/web • Select titles, frequency, data content, formats (CSV, SGML), extent (of backfile) • Auto delivery • Embed in one’s systems • Save time & money in data entry, cataloging, linking, indexing • User goes straight to article of choice

  12. Conclusion • Distributed Publishing: • has longevity • does not impinge on business • does not need changes in ownership • is non-threatening to competitors • very useful • advances science & education

  13. Thank You Anne Dixon Institute of Physics Publishing anne.dixon@ioppublishing.co.uk http://www.iop.org tel: 44 117 929 7481

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