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- From: pkarp@AI.SRI.COM (Peter Karp)
- Newsgroups: bionet.molbio.bio-matrix
- Subject: Electronic Journals
- Message-ID: <CMM.0.90.2.728271093.pkarp@Rockaway.AI.SRI.COM>
- Date: 29 Jan 93 01:31:33 GMT
- Sender: daemon@net.bio.net
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-
- Here is a fairly interesting article on electronic publishing,
- a topic of several past discussions on this list.
-
- Peter
-
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- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 14:33:46 EST
- Reply-To: Jim Croft <jrc@ANBG.GOV.AU>
- Sender: Biological Systematics Discussion List <TAXACOM@HARVARDA.HARVARD.EDU>
- From: Jim Croft <jrc@ANBG.GOV.AU>
- Subject: John Franks - Electronic Journals
- X-To: taxacom@harvarda.harvard.edu
- X-Cc: john@math.nwu.edu
- To: Multiple recipients of list TAXACOM <TAXACOM@HARVARDA.HARVARD.EDU>
-
- The following article by John Franks appeared in 4 parts on the PACS-L
- discussion group. It is a thoughtful and dispassionate consideration of
- the issues surrounding electronic publishing, public access databases
- and community computing, issues that biological collections managers,
- information managers and systematists are going to have to address
- seriously over the next few very short years.
-
- The article is a little long (689 lines, 40 698 bytes), but well worth
- reading by those of you who are interested in providing electronic data
- and information (and isn't that everyone?).
-
- I have taken the liberty of gluing the four parts together and posting
- it to taxacom. For those of you already suffering with the information
- bombardment from lists such as PACS-L, the usual apologies for cross
- posting...
-
- jim
- ------------------------- Article follows ---------------------------
-
- What is an Electronic Journal?
-
- by John Franks
- Department of Mathematics
- Northwestern University
- Evanston, IL 60208-2730
- john@math.nwu.edu
-
- January 1993
-
- There is considerable enthusiasm among scholars for creating purely
- electronic journals which can be distributed via the internet.
- However, in discussing this with colleagues and other interested
- parties, I find that there are widely varying conceptions, many of them
- conflicting, of what should constitute an electronic journal. Most
- scholars, when asked, are supportive of the idea of such a journal.
- But, often they have only a vague sense of what it should mean --
- sometimes little more than the hope that like electronic mail, articles
- which interest them will magically appear on their desktop computer.
-
- In this article I would like to explore some alternative possibilities
- for an electronic research journal and comment on the strengths and
- weaknesses of these alternatives. My focus will be a narrow one --
- restricted to a scholarly research periodical, marketed primarily to
- research libraries. In particular, I want only to address a
- publication whose authors and editors are unpaid. The addition of
- royalties paid to author or editor could have a major effect on the
- issues considered here. Likewise, the electronic publication of a
- book, even one with a narrow scholarly audience, might entail quite
- different considerations. Moreover, I want only to address the
- possibilities for journals distributed via the internet, rather than
- say, publication in CD-Rom or magnetic tape formats.
-
- WHY DO WE EVEN NEED A JOURNAL?
-
- The first question for an author in the internet arena is why publish,
- in the traditional sense, at all? Why not simply write articles and
- make them freely available on the internet to anyone who is
- interested? After all, there is no direct monetary incentive for the
- author.
-
- In fact, journals are not an absolute necessity. Making articles
- freely available via the internet is one way to publish electronically
- and some authors will choose this method. I would call this form of
- electronic publishing the ``vanity press model.'' Like all the models
- of electronic publishing considered here it has some advantages and
- some disadvantages and we will try to enumerate both.
-
- The Vanity Press Model
-
- First, let's look at the drawbacks, and answer the question why have a
- journal at all. There are at least three important functions which a
- journal can provide beyond mere distribution of text.
-
- The first of these is certification. A journal has an editor who
- chooses a referee or referees to read a submission and attest to its
- scholarly worthiness. The editor also maintains quality control in
- non-content areas such as language and presentation (usually with the
- aid of a copy editor). Different journals have different scholarly
- standards. This process provides a peer review mechanism for
- certifying the quality of scholarly work. Academic institutions rely
- on this process when judging the merits of an individual for promotion
- or tenure. While an author may have no direct monetary incentive
- to publish in a journal, the indirect one can be significant.
-
- The second important function is archiving. An author would like
- to know that twenty or thirty years from now, perhaps after she has
- retired, her work will still be available to other researchers.
- Additionally, scholars in the field would like to have an authoritative
- version of the author's text together with, at least, a definitive date
- of its creation. Traditionally, archiving is a function not provided
- by the journal, but by libraries which purchase the journal and
- maintain its preservation.
-
- The third function which a journal offers is marketing. If I
- simply write an article and make it available from my personal or
- departmental computer to anyone on the internet, how will other
- scholars know of its existence? By contrast, if I publish in a
- recognized journal, other scholars are much more likely to be aware of
- my work. This might be because the journal is in their library and
- they glance at its contents on a regular basis, or because they consult
- a second order table of contents such as Current Contents.
-
- These three functions, certification, archiving, and marketing
- constitute the primary value added for the author who publishes in a
- journal rather than using the ``vanity press'' model. As we discuss
- other models of electronic publishing we will want to see how well they
- all perform these author support functions.
-
- It is equally important to ask how well an electronic journal supports
- subscribers. This is the area where there are the greatest potential
- advantages over traditional paper journals. Indeed, if an electronic
- journal is not substantially better or cheaper than a traditional
- journal, its success will be limited. And if it offers less
- functionality than a traditional journal it is difficult to see how it
- will be able to survive in the long run. At an absolute minimum, it
- must be possible for the subscriber to an electronic journal to print a
- hard copy of an article of interest, which is of the same quality as a
- photocopy of an article in a printed journal. Simply viewing an
- article on a computer screen will not be acceptable, nor will a printed
- copy in a markup language.
-
- Beyond this minimum, two of the most important criteria by which we
- should judge different models of electronic publishing are their ease
- of access and and the quality of their user interface. These are the
- areas where an electronic format can surpass the functionality of a
- traditional journal. It might, for example, allow the scholar to browse
- and search electronically on his desktop computer before printing a
- copy, on his own printer, for detailed study.
-
- Despite its seeming weakness in the author support functions, the
- vanity press model does quite well in these scholar support areas.
- Since the scholar downloads the electronic text to his personal
- computer, he has complete freedom and flexibility in the choice of how
- he views it, searches it, or prints it.
-
- Another big plus for the vanity press model is speed. An article can
- be made available to the scholarly public, literally the instant it is
- completed. This is such an important asset that many authors already
- use this model, in addition to publishing in a traditional journal.
- This practice, of posting an article to a so-called ``preprint data
- base'' can take different forms. Typically, an author submits an
- abstract of his work to a moderator who periodically distributes a
- collection of abstracts, together with information on obtaining the
- full text of articles, to an electronic mailing list of interested
- scholars. In all cases of which I am aware, anyone can join the
- mailing list without charge and there is little or no editorial control
- by the moderator (i.e. the certification function is not provided).
- The full text may be kept centrally by the moderator or supplied by the
- author either through anonymous ftp (see glossary) or, more commonly,
- by electronic mail.
-
- There are several variants of this process and there will surely be
- evolutionary changes in the future. Already some groups in physics are
- making preprints available via gopher (see glossary). This provides a
- much better mechanism since it provides a number of features not
- available through the e-mail process. The most important of these
- include:
-
- * a simpler, easy-to-use user interface
- * on-line browsing of abstracts or full text,
- * keyword searching of abstracts or full text,
- * immediate downloading of desired articles.
-
- If only to meet the need of preprint distribution, the vanity press
- model of electronic publishing will be with us for the foreseeable
- future, and its use is likely to expand greatly. There is sufficient
- interest that the ease of use and functionality of this model will
- likely continue to improve.
-
- The absence of the marketing function in this model is not as big a
- problem as it might initially seem. Also its significance as a
- drawback is diminishing and will continue to do so. The abstract
- distribution mailing lists and other preprint distribution channels,
- provide an author with an increasingly effective way to provide
- electronic visibility for his work. It seems likely that some authors
- who are indifferent to (or actively resent) the certification function
- of journals, and are willing to forego the the archiving function, will
- opt to publish some of their work only via the vanity press model.
-
- It is worth noting, by the way, that the practice described above of
- ``double publishing,'' -- first electronically, using the vanity press
- model and then traditionally through an established journal -- may
- generate some controversy in the near future. Publishers would like
- the electronic availability of preprints to cease as soon as an article
- appears. Some publishers, in their copyright transfer agreement,
- explicitly deny the author the right to make his work available on an
- electronic data base [1]. I know of no instances of this restriction
- being enforced, however, and current practice seems to be for
- electronic versions of articles to be available indefinitely.
-
-
- WHAT SHOULD A SUBSCRIBER TO AN ELECTRONIC
- JOURNAL ACTUALLY GET?
-
- Surprisingly many people who are strong proponents of creating an
- electronic journal haven't thought a great deal about the answer to
- this question. Those who have seem to offer a wide array of very
- divergent answers. More than anything else it is the answer to this
- question which distinguishes the different models of electronic
- publishing. As we characterize some of the different visions of what
- should constitute an electronic journal, it is useful to keep the
- varying answers to this question in mind.
-
- The Data Base Model
-
- The second model of electronic publishing (and the first which involves
- what we could really call a journal) is the ``data base model.'' In
- this model all articles reside on a centralized data base maintained by
- the publisher and what the subscriber gets is the right to access that
- data base and probably use search software on the central computer to
- locate and download articles of interest to him or her. This is
- roughly the way the commercial data services like Lexis/Nexis or Dialog
- work.
-
- In practice this might work as follows for the scholar wishing to make
- use of the journal. The subscription to the journal would be purchased
- by the library of the scholar's institution. The library would
- acquire a password allowing access to the journal data base, and would
- be responsible for protecting it. To use the journal the scholar would
- typically schedule a time slot with the library and go the library at
- the appointed time where a librarian who has access to the password
- would login to the central data base. When the scholar finds an
- article of interest, it is probable (though not certain) that he would
- be permitted to make a single hard copy of it for personal use.
- Because of concern about unauthorized redistribution it is unlikely
- that the publisher would allow an article to be downloaded in
- electronic format.
-
- The publisher might only charge the library a fixed annual fee for
- subscription, but current practice suggests that some publishers are
- likely to impose additional charges. For example, cost may be a
- function of the maximum number of simultaneous users. Some publishers
- will also likely want to charge extra for the use of their search
- software and perhaps also for connect time. This may not be entirely
- negative. If the price of a journal depends on the frequency of its
- use then libraries would have to pay less for access to infrequently
- used journals. Moreover, publishers of several journals might well
- offer package deals enabling libraries greater access to journal
- material at less cost.
-
- How well does this model meet our three author support needs of
- certification, archiving and marketing? Certification and marketing
- would likely be quite comparable to a traditional paper journal, but
- archiving would be dramatically different. Since the library does not
- maintain a copy of the text, it has no archival function in this
- model. There are significant trade offs here, which are difficult to
- evaluate. On the plus side, if a library starts subscribing to such a
- journal they presumably have immediate access to all past issues
- (though publishers may want to charge extra for this). On the other
- hand, if a library cancels its subscription to such a journal it loses
- its access to all issues including those which appeared during the time
- it was a subscriber.
-
- More importantly, however, if a publisher should go out of business it
- is not clear who, if anyone, would assume the archival responsibility.
- This appears to be a major weakness in the archiving function for this
- model.
-
- This model is also quite weak in the scholar support criteria: ease of
- use and quality of user interface. It's functionality is roughly
- comparable to that of a traditional paper journal and almost identical
- to a journal which is traditionally marketed but published only on
- CD-Rom. This model realizes very few of the potential electronic
- journal advantages, which have sparked the interest of scholars. Most
- noticeably the scholar must still physically go to the library and with
- the aid of a librarian produce a copy for personal use (assuming this
- is possible). In some ways the functionality of this model is less
- than that of a traditional paper journal.
-
- The Software Model
-
- One of the most miraculous technological achievements of this century
- is the development of economically important goods which are
- essentially infinitely reproducible at negligible cost. The miracle of
- the loaves and fishes pales by comparison to the ease with which anyone
- with a personal computer can duplicate either software or electronic
- documents, or someone with a digital tape recorder can duplicate an
- artistic performance. It must be one of the greatest ironies of our
- age that this capability is less often viewed as a boon to mankind than
- as an enormous liability to the publication of music, or software, or
- even scholarly research. By now we are all familiar with the downside
- of this technological miracle: unauthorized reproduction of
- intellectual property deprives its creator of the fruits of his labor.
- If the creator has no incentive to create he will not do so. (For a
- fascinating contrarian view of this subject see [2]).
-
- Given the similarities in the nature of this problem for electronic
- publishing and software publishing, it is not surprising that one
- vision of an electronic journal seeks to leverage the techniques used
- in software publishing.
-
- What the subscriber gets in the ``software model'' is a piece of
- software. It should run on a networked personal computer or
- workstation and probably be available in the several standard flavors
- of such devices. Other than the addition of this software this model
- is quite similar to the data base model. Here's how it might work.
-
- A library or individual subscribes and receives in exchange a floppy
- disk in the desired flavor. When the software is run on an internet
- connected computer it connects to the data base on the journal's
- central computer. The user can then perform searches, download etc.,
- but all downloaded materials will be sent in a proprietary encrypted
- form which the software can decrypt and display to the user. There is
- no need for a password, since someone who is not in possession of a
- currently valid copy of the software cannot decrypt the text. The
- software might, or might not, allow the user to print a copy of a text
- document for personal use (it would be technically difficult to allow
- this while disallowing the creation of an electronic copy of the
- document). The software would have an expiration date which at each
- use would be compared with the current date on the central server. The
- problem of unauthorized access to the journal is reduced to the problem
- of preventing the unauthorized reproduction of the software (a
- previously addressed if not totally solved problem).
-
- Since this is really a higher tech version of the data base model it is
- comparable to that model in meeting the certification, archiving and
- marketing needs of the author. In particular, it shares the major
- archiving weakness noted above. On the other hand in terms of
- functionality for the journal reader it is potentially an improvement.
- For example, it is possible that the scholar's library could negotiate
- a site license for the software or perhaps a floating license (see
- glossary). In this way the software could run on the scholar's
- personal computer and display text there, even though the only
- subscription is through the library.
-
- The Subnet Model
-
- The next model of electronic publishing may be the most commonly used
- commercially as of today, but it is not as yet used for scholarly
- journals. Instead it is currently used primarily for electronic
- journalism. Here is an example of how it works.
-
- My university subscribes to a daily news service called ClariNet which
- provides all UPI syndicated articles. It consists of an enormous amount
- of material, including not only world, national and regional news (from
- all regions), but also sports, and columns. There are several hundred
- newspaper length articles daily. The university is licensed to make
- this material freely available only to members of the university
- community.
-
- It is distributed using software which also simultaneously distributes
- USENET (see glossary) articles. This software, like all client/server
- software (see glossary), splits the distribution function into two
- parts. All the text resides on a central server, but a server central
- to my university -- the archiving function now resides with us. This
- central server provides the articles via a standard protocol to
- ``client'' programs running on a variety of platforms. These include
- networked personal computers and workstations, microcomputers in
- publicly available labs, and larger computers designed to provide dial
- up access to electronic mail and other network services for faculty and
- students. The protocol used is called the Network News Transfer
- Protocol, (NNTP), and the software for both servers and clients is
- readily available without cost. Surprisingly, it seems that, on
- average, this software is of higher quality and better supported than
- most commercial software.
-
- The restriction that the ClariNet information be distributed only
- locally is enforced by the server checking the IP address of the
- computer running the client software. The IP address is that strangely
- formatted number, like 129.105.123.456, which is associated with a
- networked computer and provides the basis for routing network traffic.
- (IP stands for Internet Protocol). This number has a hierarchical
- structure. For example, all IP addresses at my institution begin with
- the two triples of digits 129.105. This means the the news server
- software can simply deny access to any client whose IP address does not
- begin with this sequence. In other words, the service is offered to
- anyone on our university ``IP subnet.'' There are a variety of
- different software ``clients'' for this server. These are software
- packages designed to run on a particular platform (e.g. Mac or IBM
- PC). They allow the user to browse the available documents on the
- server and present selected articles to the user for reading,
- downloading or printing. It is the responsibility of the client
- software, not the server, to deal with any display idiosyncrasies of
- the the user's computer and to take advantage of any of its features.
-
- The license granted my university permits us to archive these
- documents, but, we do not. Individuals have the right to make copies,
- electronic or printed, for their personal use. Protection against
- unauthorized use is afforded by copyright.
-
- The subnet for my university is divided into further subnets by the
- additional digits in the IP address. For example, appropriately
- specifying the next three digits designates all those networked
- computers in my academic department. And, of course, specifying all
- twelve digits (usually) uniquely determines a single computer. This
- makes it equally feasible for a publisher to provide access to everyone
- who has access to a computer on my departmental subnet, or to everyone
- who has access to an individual computer.
-
- The particular client/server software and the NNTP protocol used for
- news articles is not appropriate for a scholarly journal, but there are
- several alternatives which are generally available without cost. In
- particular, the National Science Foundation has funded the Clearing
- House for Networked Information Discovery and Retrieval (CNIDR), which
- will develop and support client/server software using the ISO standard
- protocol for electronic text known as Z39.50 (see glossary). There has
- also been substantial development of software appropriate for this use
- by Universities wanting to create campus wide information servers.
- Most notable in this category is the gopher project.
-
- There are many advantages to a scholarly journal distributed in a way
- similar to this. The utility to the scholar is much greater when he or
- she has direct access to documents. This model would rank quite high
- in the scholar support criteria of ease of access and quality of user
- interface. If a journal is made available through a standard protocol,
- the user should have substantial choice about the interface which he
- uses to view or download the data. I routinely use three different
- clients to read the UPI news described above, the choice depending on
- whether I am using my personal computer at home, or a workstation in my
- office. This kind of flexibility is not likely to be possible with the
- software or data base models described above.
-
- The mechanism used by gopher or NNTP servers for restricting access to
- to certain subnets is much simpler than a password scheme and cheaper
- to implement. It is very much cheaper and simpler to maintain than a
- model where the publisher must create and support all client software.
- There are substantial economies for the publisher who uses standard
- software supported by university computing organizations or
- organizations like CNIDR. It may seem surprising, but the quality of
- the client/server software supporting standard protocols and available
- without cost is much higher than what a publisher is likely to develop
- and generally of at least as high quality as the average of mass market
- commercial software. The level of support for such software is
- commensurately high.
-
- In the subnet model the publishers flexibility in charging is somewhat
- limited. Subscriptions can be offered to universities, departments, or
- individuals, but since the text is now archived by someone other than
- the publisher, it is no longer possible to charge for searching or
- connect time.
-
- The Subsidized Model
-
- The three electronic journal models described so far, the data base,
- the software, and the subnet, differ primarily in the extent and method
- of their efforts to *prevent* the contents of an electronic journal
- from being read by those who have not paid for it. In the first two of
- these models the cost of these efforts will represent a substantial
- fraction of the cost of publishing the journal. It is not
- inconceivable that the cost of restricting access to the journal will
- represent a majority of production costs. These costs, of course, will
- be passed on to the subscriber, but there is another less tangible cost
- for the subscriber which may be more significant. Experience with the
- publishing of software has shown that attempts to prevent unauthorized
- use, make the use much harder for the authorized user. This is true to
- such an extent that many publishers have abandoned software copy
- protection, in response to user demand, and rely instead only on the
- protection afforded by copyright. It is quite possible that the
- inconvenience resulting from schemes to protect electronic journals
- will be even more obtrusive than in software publishing. In
- particular, any scheme which requires the user to physically go to a
- library and perhaps to enlist the aid of a librarian, or to login and
- supply a password *each time* a journal is consulted is unlikely to
- find favor among subscribers.
-
- All this is especially ironic since the authors and editor derive no
- benefit from the attempts to restrict access. On the contrary, the the
- best interests of the authors and editor are served by the widest
- possible distribution (even to non-subscribers).
-
- These considerations lead naturally to the consideration of alternative
- methods of funding electronic journal production, which would permit
- free distribution to any interested user. Electronic journals
- currently in existence are mostly of this type, though, as yet, only a
- few could be considered true scholarly journals as opposed to newsletters.
-
- A subsidized journal which provides a good example from the point of
- view of technical production and distribution, is EFFector
- Online, the newsletter of the Electronic Frontier Foundation [3].
- This publication, which appears approximately monthly, is available to
- any interested party through at least four different electronic
- protocols. As issues appear they are posted to the USENET system. In
- addition they are made available for anonymous ftp, they are made
- available via a gopher server and they are indexed and available to
- WAIS clients (see glossary). This shotgun approach to distribution
- meets the subscriber needs of easy access and quality user interface
- better than any other electronic publication of which I am aware.
-
- Not all of these distribution channels would be appropriate for a
- scholarly journal, but until such time as a standard emerges for
- browsing and downloading electronic documents, it is a wise choice to
- make documents available via a variety of mechanisms. The cost of
- duplicating distribution protocols is not high, and is far outweighed
- by the benefits to users.
-
- A second electronic publication worthy of mention in this category is
- the Ulam Quarterly. This is a refereed mathematics journal
- provided primarily in an electronic format. Issues of the journal are
- available by anonymous ftp and are ``offered without charge, courtesy
- of Palm Beach Atlantic College Mathematics Department with support from
- the University of Florida.[4]'' This provides an example of a journal
- in this category where certification is handled in the traditional
- manner. At present this journal is electronically archived at two
- sites and marketing is minimal.
-
- Who might underwrite the costs of electronically publishing a journal
- if there are no subscription revenues? There are a number of
- possibilities. A professional society might sponsor such a journal and
- pay for it out of members' dues. Costs might be provided, at least in
- part, by government grants. A journal might be sponsored by a
- University, or even a single academic department, as in the case of the
- Ulam Quarterly. An important factor is that with effectively
- free distribution via the internet, and the fact that authors and
- editors are not paid, the cost of producing an electronic journal can
- be quite modest.
-
-
- AMONG THESE MODELS WHICH WILL EMERGE AS THE DOMINANT ONE?
-
- This is a difficult question to answer. It is not clear what direction
- commercial publishers will take. At the moment they seem generally
- conservative and uninterested in innovating. But, in addition to
- publishers, two other groups, scholars and librarians, will strongly
- influence the development of electronic journals.
-
- It is in the interest of scholars, both as producers and consumers of
- journal articles, to have the widest possible distribution with the
- fewest encumberances. While a scholar's strongest motivation in
- selecting a journal for his work will likely be to place it in the most
- prestigious journal which will accept it, it seems likely that other
- factors being equal he or she will opt to publish in a subsidized
- journal where the article's exposure is likely to be greater.
-
- While the interests of librarians may overlap with those of scholars,
- they do not coincide. A key issue is the state of libraries' readiness
- and willingness to archive electronic journals. On the one hand
- librarians have little desire to become computer center managers. On
- the other hand they understand that if they only license access to
- information that is owned by a publisher then their role as librarian
- is diminished. They become little more than a conduit to the publisher
- for University funds. For a library to own electronic materials it must
- archive them. This in turn requires computing facilities and new
- expertise.
-
- It is important to understand that the attitudes of many
- library staff members towards electronic publishing, or computing in
- general, are influenced by their experience and expertise with the
- software and computers they use for Online Public Access Catalogs
- (OPACs). These are typically commercial software systems like NOTIS,
- which were designed (and often run on computers which were designed) in
- an era before personal computers and workstations were widely used.
-
- It is likely that among many librarians there is still an expectation
- that systems like NOTIS and the computers on which they run can be
- relevant to providing online access to archived electronic journals.
- In my opinion, there is very little chance that this expectation can be
- realized. Librarians have already come to realize there traditional
- OPAC platform cannot provide access to information in CD-Rom format and
- that to provide this access it is necessary to acquire separate
- computers and even separate local area networks.
-
- Access to electronic journals, provided using modern protocols, will
- likewise require new computing facilities and new expertise. It is not
- completely impossible to provide access using the old software and/or
- hardware, but it will be much less cost effective to do so. Moreover, the
- quality of service will be so low that users will find it unacceptable
- when compared with similar services provided on modern computers. It
- may be possible to teach an old dog new tricks, but it is very much
- cheaper to buy a new dog.
-
- Of course libraries will make the transition. But it will likely take
- time and in the short run libraries will be ill equipped to archive
- electronic journals and provide their patrons with access to them.
- This lack is even more dramatic for materials which are more
- complicated than ASCII text. For example, in mathematics and some
- sciences, it is very common for journal articles to be created in the
- TeX text formatting language. The Ulam Quarterly provides its users
- with articles in two formats -- the TeX ``source'' which is what the
- author prepares, and the Postscript output which is obtained from
- processing that source, and is suitable for sending to Postscript
- capable printers. Almost no libraries today are prepared to deal
- constructively with TeX source. And relatively few are prepared to
- handle Postscript on a substantial scale.
-
- All this, may, for the short term, give libraries a reason to prefer
- the data base or software models described above, because these models
- will require the least new computer hardware and expertise. On the
- other hand, there are strong countervailing forces. There is a desire, I
- think, among librarians to continue their role as archivers. They are
- likely to be willing to acquire the new skills necessary for this
- purpose. This argues for an electronic journal model which permits
- librarians this role. Likewise, current intense budget pressures
- should make the subsidized model popular among librarians.
-
- This article is, of course, highly speculative. The track record of
- those who try to predict the course of developments in the use of
- computers is rather poor. Nevertheless, for those of us thinking about
- the development of new electronic journals, choices have to be made
- now. It is my hope that is article can clarify the array of
- possibilities which lie before us.
-
-
- GLOSSARY
- --------
-
- anonymous ftp: (see ftp)
-
- client/server software:
- Software whose use involves two computers connected on a network -- a
- ``server'', on which some information physically resides, and a
- ``client'' which provides a user interface and requests information
- from the server. The advantage of this scheme is that the server needs
- no information about the user's interface. The client and server
- communicate via a specially designed protocol. Thus a single server
- can communicate with users of many very different kinds of computers
- without knowing anything about the screen or terminal characteristics
- of those computers. It is the responsibility of the client (running on
- the user's computer) to know about the display characteristics of the
- user's interface and to supply the information in a way compatible with
- them. See {\it gopher} for an example.
-
- floating license:
- A client/server mechanism for licensing software for use on computers
- on a network. If N licenses are purchased for use on a network with
- many more than N computers, the first N client computers who want to
- use it are permitted to do so. Subsequent requests are denied until
- fewer than N copies of the software are in use. This has the advantage
- of making it possible to use the software on a very large number of
- computers (though not simultaneously) while purchasing a much smaller
- number of licenses.
-
- ftp:
- File transfer protocol. A standard protocol for transferring files
- between computers on the internet. Normally, it requires the user to
- have an account on both computers. However, it provides a mechanism
- called {\it anonymous ftp} which allows the owner of a file on one
- computer to make it freely available for copying by anyone on the
- network. Most ftp clients have no capability of viewing or browsing
- the files they transfer.
-
- gopher:
- The most widely used electronic information delivery system (not
- counting USENET which is really a conferencing system) is called
- Gopher. Initial development on gopher was done at the University of
- Minnesota (whence its name), but important parts have been developed at
- Illinois, Indiana, Rice, Stanford, Utah, and elsewhere. Gopher is a
- client/server based distributed information delivery system. (see {\it
- client/server}). At present there are gopher clients for the Apple
- Macintosh, IBM PC, IBM mainframe (CMS), NeXT, Dec VMS, Unix (curses),
- and X-Windows (including Sun Openwindows). All the client and server
- software is freely available without cost. A unique feature of this
- software is the ability to make links from one server to another so it
- appears to the user that the contents of the second server is a subset
- of the hierarchy of the first. Currently the NSF and NIH run gopher
- servers as one means of online access to their public documents.
- Several hundred colleges and universities use this software as the
- basis of campus wide information servers.
-
- NNTP:
- Network News Transfer Protocol -- the protocol used for transferring
- text on the USENET conferencing system. It has facilities for
- transmitting text documents between servers and between servers and
- clients. (see USENET)
-
- USENET:
- This is a large conferencing system with a distributed data base which
- exists on literally thousands of ``servers'' world wide. It contains
- ``articles'' in various ``groups'' organized by subject. There are
- currently in excess of 2,500 groups. Articles are kept only for a
- short time (typically 2 weeks) and then discarded, thought some groups
- are archived. The collection of articles present on a server at any
- one time can easily exceed a gigabyte (= 1,000 megabytes) of disk
- space. Groups can be ``moderated'', in which case articles are
- submitted to an editor who accepts or rejects them for inclusion, or
- ``unmoderated'' in which case anyone can ``post'' an article to the
- group. This would be an appropriate mechanism to distribute a
- newsletter, and is used to distribute the newsletter of the American
- Physical Society. There are a number of client software programs
- available for most major platforms.
-
- WAIS:
- WAIS stands for Wide Area Information Service. It consists of a full
- text search program utilizing a client/server model. WAIS is
- complementary to Gopher. It is useful when one wants to do keyword
- searches through a very large number of documents and then browse those
- documents with the best matches for the search terms. It also has some
- built in capability for auditing in order to charge for access. It is
- based on an older (1988) version of the ISO standard Z39.50 for full
- text search and retrieval.
-
- Z39.50:
- An International Standards Organization Standard protocol for full text
- search and retrieval. Public domain servers and clients using an older
- version of this protocol are currently available (see WAIS). It is
- expected that similar software supporting the latest version of the
- standard will soon be available without cost from the Clearing House
- for Networked Information Discovery and Retrieval (CNIDR) which is
- receiving NSF support to develop it..
-
- REFERENCES
-
- [1] American Math. Soc., Transfer of Copyright Agreement
-
- [2] Richard M. Stallman, The GNU Manifesto,
- available by anonymous ftp from prep.ai.mit.edu in /pub/gnu/GNUinfo/GNU
-
- [3] EFFector Online, a publication of the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation, ISSN 1062-9424, available via gopher at gopher.eff.org
-
- [4] Ulam Quarterly announcement on Amer. Math. Soc. gopher
- at e-math.ams.org port 70
-
- Copyright 1993 by John Franks. Permission is granted to reproduce this
- article for any purpose provided the source is cited and the author's
- name and affiliation are not removed.
-
-
- ------------------------- Article ends -------------------------------
-
- ____________________________________________________________________________
- Jim Croft [Herbarium CBG] internet: jrc@anbg.gov.au
- Australian National Botanic Gardens voice: +61-6-2509 490
- GPO Box 1777, Canberra, ACT 2601, AUSTRALIA fax: +61-6-2509 599
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