RE : Re: The Birth of the Open Access Movement

2011-10-21 Thread Guédon Jean-Claude
-Post: goal@eprints.org List-Post: goal@eprints.org Date: mer. 19/10/2011 20:26 À: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org Objet : Re: The Birth of the Open Access Movement Stevan: Any movement has many parents and many birthdays. This is the one I remember fondly

Re: The Birth of the Open Access Movement

2011-10-20 Thread Stevan Harnad
at Cal Tech across the years, has just (over)generously credited the birth of the Open Access (OA) Movement to the birth of the Open Archives Initiative (OAI)... Linked version: 12th Anniversary of the Birth of the Open Archives Initiative (sic) On Wed, Oct 19, 2011 at 8:26 PM, Eric F. Van de

Re: The Birth of the Open Access Movement

2011-10-20 Thread Steve Hitchcock
of the Open Archives Initiative (OAI) (a protocol for making online bibliographic databases -- initially called archives, later re-baptised repositories -- interoperable) in 1999 certainly was not the birth of the Open Access Movement. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/february00/vandesompel-oai

Re: The Birth of the Open Access Movement

2011-10-20 Thread Derek Law
09:58 To: american-scientist-open-access-fo...@listserver.sigmaxi.org Subject: Re: The Birth of the Open Access Movement The Santa Fe meeting may not have been the birth of Open Access, but it fired the starting gun for interoperable institutional repositories based on what later became the OAI

The Birth of the Open Access Movement

2011-10-19 Thread Eric F . Van de Velde
From my blog at http://scitechsociety.blogspot.com/ The Birth of the Open Access Movement Twelve years ago, on October 21st 1999, Clifford Lynch and Don Waters called to order a meeting in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The organizers, Paul Ginsparg, Rick Luce, and Herbert Van de Sompel, had a modest

Re: The Birth of the Open Access Movement

2011-10-19 Thread Stevan Harnad
: From my blog at http://scitechsociety.blogspot.com/ The Birth of the Open Access Movement Twelve years ago, on October 21st 1999, Clifford Lynch and Don Waters called to order a meeting in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The organizers, Paul Ginsparg, Rick Luce, and Herbert Van de Sompel, had a modest