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SV-POW! ... All sauropod vertebrae, except when we're talking about Open Access. ISSN 3033-3695
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100% Totally RealAcademic SpringOpen AccessShiny Digital FutureStinkin' PublishersGeowissenschaftenEnglisch
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Today’s Guardian has a piece by Graham Taylor, director of academic, educational and professional publishing at the Publishers Association, entitled Attacking publishers will not make open access any more sustainable . It’s such a crock that I felt compelled to respond point-by-point in the comments.

Academic SpringOpen AccessGeowissenschaftenEnglisch
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{.alignright .size-medium .wp-image-6270 loading=“lazy” attachment-id=“6270” permalink=“http://svpow.com/2012/05/22/open-access-gathers-pace-and-you-can-make-a-difference/barack-obama/” orig-file=“https://svpow.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/barack-obama-007.jpg” orig-size=“460,276” comments-opened=“1” image-meta=“{"aperture":"0","credit":"Photograph: Jewel

Open AccessStinkin' PublishersGeowissenschaftenEnglisch
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[The title of this post is an allusion to Matt’s older post Authors versus publishers.] Following on from yesterday’s rant, I’m moved to write this one by Stephen Curry’s report on the latest Finch Committee meeting.

Open AccessRantsStinkin' PublishersGeowissenschaftenEnglisch
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I just read this in a Times Higher Eduction report on David Willetts’s recent speech: Oh, so publishers “will not accept” Green OA? Where the hell do they get the arrogance to assume that a funding body needs their permission to say how their money is going to be spent?

BrachiosaurusSacralGeowissenschaftenEnglisch
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In my 2009 brachiosaur paper, I gave rather short shrift to the sacrum of Brachiosaurus — in part because there is no really good sacrum of Giraffatitan to compare it to. Also my own photos of the sacrum, taken back before I figured out how to photograph big bones, are all pretty terrible. Happily, Phil Mannion took some much better photos and gave us permission to use them.

PLoSStinkin' ReviewersGeowissenschaftenEnglisch
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How things have always been Traditional scientific journals ask peer-reviewers to do two things: assess whether a manuscript is scientifically sound, and judge whether it’s sufficiently important to appear in the particular journal it’s been submitted to. So I could have sent my 2009 paper on Brachiosaurus to Nature , and the reviewers would (presumably) have said “this is good science, but not exciting or sexy enough for

Paleontologists Behaving BadlyRantsScience CommunicationGeowissenschaftenEnglisch
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Question. I am supposed to be meeting up with Mike Taylor at the conference, but we’ve not met before and I won’t recognise him.  Do you know what he looks like? Candidate Answer #1. He’s a bit overweight and has white hair. Candidate Answer #2. He exhibits mild to moderate abdominal hypertrophy and accelerated ontogenetic degradation in the pigmentation of the cranial integument.