I would ask this question in Academic communities that care about XML and/or XQuery. Anyone with a list of those? I would imagine "Library Science" cares. There might also be other academic communities/subcultures that have important XML standards to which they are committed.
-Eric Eric Bloch Director, Community MarkLogic Corporation desk +1 650 655 2390 | mobile +1 650 339 0376 email [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> web developer.marklogic.com<http://developer.marklogic.com/> twitter @eedeebee On Oct 12, 2011, at 11:03 AM, Daniela Florescu wrote: Dear all, I am having a problem right now, and I don't know how to solve it. We had over the summer several outstanding students, who did really great research in processing XML and XQuery. Here comes the question. Where can we publish the result of this research !? 1. I know that there is XML Prague (and that would be my first choice given the skill of the audience). But the problem with XML Prague is that it doesn't have (yet) the academic "cloud". Students don't get PhDs because they published there, and professors don't get tenure. (whether the world is well organized and why doesn't happen is a completely different topic -- but that's the reality). In a CV for an application for a professor position for Stanford you can put it at best in the category: hobbies and other activities, despite the fact that the work is technically equally challenging, if not more. Balisage is another option, but has other problems. 2. Database conferences. Unfortunately those guys don't understand much about XML. In fact they are strongly convinced that XML/XQuery is totally dead (just went to a Stanford professor talk that said just that, and Stonebreaker says something along the same lines on a regular basis in the NoSQL conferences). So they'll not understand the XQuery new work, let alone publish it. 3. Functional programming conferences (after all, XQuery is a functional language..). Maybe it's a choice !? I have no experience, but I am interested to hear if anybody else has. 4. WWW Conference. Based on my experience, it's such a wide conference --- it's like a conference on water -- where do you start !? As a result the audience, as well as the program committee, is interested in widely different things (and XML/XQuery might not be one of them, and then you are out of luck) 5. NoSQL conferences. Unfortunately, there are two problems. First, NoSQL is still not accepted in academic conferences -- they have the same problem as XML itself. And second, they try to stay away from XML like crazy ("angle brackets, not cool, man, not cool. Not Web scale."). So, I am interested in your feedback. - Where is the "research center of gravity" of this community ? - How can we stimulate young smart researchers to work on interesting and hard problems if they cannot value this work for their carrier ? Any feedback appreciated, thanks Dana _______________________________________________ [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> http://x-query.com/mailman/listinfo/talk
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