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MISTICA: Open Journal Systems

From: Michel J. Menou ([email protected])
Date: mar feb 17 2004 - 21:06:50 AST


Puede ser interesante como herramienta para Realistica

> Test Drive
> OPEN JOURNAL SYSTEMS

> As part of the University of British Columbia�s federally funded
> research initiative to improve the scholarly and public quality of
> academic publishing on a global basis, we have developed Open Journal
> Systems (OJS). This is open source software that can be freely
> downloaded and installed on your server. The intent is to help journals
> and scholarly societies seriously consider publishing on an open access
> or free-to-read basis, which has been shown to increase readership
> dramatically. The initial reviews of OJS have been very positive
> (http://pkp.ubc.ca/ojs/ojs_comments.html).
>
> This online journal management and publishing system enables editors to
> manage, publish and index peer-reviewed journals over the Internet an
> open access or free-to-read basis, It can be installed on web-servers
> anywhere and requires few if any technical skills from editors, while
> making journals far easier, far more efficient, and far cheaper to run.
> Here is a diagram of the system:
> http://research2.csci.educ.ubc.ca/pkp/ojs/demo5/edprocess.php.
>
> 1. To see a demo journal, as well as read more about OJS and UBC�s
> Public Knowledge Project, go to http://pkp.ubc.ca/ojs. Go to the
> �Working Demo� of OJS and have a look at Theresa Rogers paper in HTML to
> see the Research Support Tool that can accompany articles published
> using this system, if the editor so chooses.
>
> 2. To take OJS for a test drive and see what online management is all
> about from the inside, go to http://pkp.ubc.ca/ojs/demo2
>...
> 3. You may also be interested in our Open Conference Systems, a demo of
> which is also available (as well as a free download) at
> http://pkp.ubc.ca/ocs/.
>
> 4. To download OJS have the person responsible for the webserver that
> will host your version of OJS go to http://pkp.ubc.ca/ojs.
>
>...
> Send along questions, concerns, accolades. Have a look at our papers on
> the democratic, economic, intellectual property, indexing, policy, and
> scholarship issues behind open access publishing at http://pkp.ubc.ca
> Take a step to change the scholarly and public
> state of knowledge.
>
> As open source software, OJS will be supported and improved by a wide
> community of developers, while we are happy to try to make it work
> better for your journal.
>
> John Willinsky
> Pacific Press Professor of Literacy and Technology
> Department of Language and Literacy Education
> University of British Columbia
> Vancouver, BC, Canada
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