Blog planets are websites that aggregate blog feeds around a particular topic or project. It is probably called after one of its first implementations, the Planet software. These planets are like conferences, rather than journals. Like conferences with a continuously ongoing year-around poster session. And like any good scientists you blog (read: present posters) and you join blog planets (read: present your poster at conferences). The reality is that many of our peers are afraid of presenting posters at conferences (read: they are afraid of blogging).

This week my blog got accepted (read: I submitted an abstract which was reviewed and accepted) to R-bloggers.com. I do not present all my posters at this venue, and use labels to identify which posters go to this meeting. For this planet, those are labeled R. And unlike other virtual worlds, these virtual conferences venues (read: a web site) are easy to reschedule. With a simple click I switch from today's floor (read: a web page) to a room dedicated to me (read: another web page).



There are many other of these conference I attend, including Planet CDK, Planet Bioclipse, Chemical blogspace (quite general topic: chemistry, but with sessions on many topics, like cheminformatics), Planet Eclipse, Planet RDF, Nature.com Blogs (very general too, but also with dedicated floors, like chemistry) and a few more I cannot think of right now. In science such planets do not exist in this form, really, The closest things are blog service providers, like Science 3.0. I guess these are like conferences for general sciences, where you're kind of lost in which corner you really belong, and you cling on to a few bloggers (read: colleagues) whose work (read: posters) you know you'll probably like.

Which conferences do you visit with your posters?
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  1. What a kind way to present R-bloggers, Thank you very much for this post :)

    Best,
    Tal

    ReplyDelete

Hi all, as posted about a year ago, I moved this blog to a different domain and different platform. Noting that I still have many followers on this domain (and not on my new domain, including over 300 on Feedly.com along).

This is my last post on blogger.com. At least, that is the plan. It has been a great 18 years. I like to thank the owners of blogger.com and Google later for providing this service. I am continuing the chem-bla-ics on a new domain: https://chem-bla-ics.linkedchemistry.info/

I, like so many others, struggle with choosing open infrastructure versus the freebie model. Of course, we know these things come and go. Google Reader, FriendFeed, Twitter/X (see doi:10.1038/d41586-023-02554-0).

Some days ago, I started added boiling points to Wikidata, referenced from Basic Laboratory and Industrial Chemicals (wikidata:Q22236188), David R. Lide's 'a CRC quick reference handbook' from 1993 (well, the edition I have). But Wikidata wants pressure (wikidata:P2077) info at which the boiling point (wikidata:P2102) was measured. Rightfully so. But I had not added those yet, because it slows me and can be automated with QuickStatements.

Just a quick note: I just love the level of detail Wikidata allows us to use. One of the marvels is the practices of 'named as', which can be used in statements for subject and objects. The notion and importance here is that things are referred to in different ways, and these properties allows us to link the interpretation with the source.

I am still an avid user of RSS/Atom feeds. I use Feedly daily, partly because of their easy to use app. My blog is part of Planet RDF, a blog planet. Blog planets aggregate blogs from many people around a certain topic. It's like a forum, but open, free, community driven. It's exactly what the web should be.

This blog is almost 18 years old now. I have long wanted to migrate it to a version control system and at the same time have more control over things. Markdown would be awesome. In the past year, I learned a lot about the power of Jekyll and needed to get more experienced with it to use it for more databases, like we now do for WikiPathways.

So, time to migrate this blog :) This is probably a multiyear project, so feel free to continue reading it hear.
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The role of a university is manifold. Being a place where people can find knowledge and the track record how that knowledge was reached is often seen as part of that. Over the past decades universities outsources this role, for example to publishers. This is seeing a lot of discussion and I am happy to see that the Dutch Universities are taking back control fast now.

I am pleased to learn that the Dutch Universities start looking at rankings of a more scientific way. It is long overdue that we take scientific peer review of the indicators used in those rankings seriously, instead of hiding beyond fud around the decline of quality of research.

So, what defines the quality of a journal? Or better, of any scholarly dissemination channel? After all, some databases do better peer review than some journals.

A bit over a year ago I got introduced to Qeios when I was asked to review an article by Michie, West, and Hasting: "Creating ontological definitions for use in science" (doi:10.32388/YGIF9B.2). I wrote up my thoughts after reading the paper, and the review was posted openly online and got a DOI. Not the first platform to do this (think F1000), but it is always nice to see some publishers taking publishing seriously. Since then, I reviewed two more papers.
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This blog deals with chemblaics in the broader sense. Chemblaics (pronounced chem-bla-ics) is the science that uses computers to solve problems in chemistry, biochemistry and related fields. The big difference between chemblaics and areas such as chem(o)?informatics, chemometrics, computational chemistry, etc, is that chemblaics only uses open source software, open data, and open standards, making experimental results reproducible and validatable. And this is a big difference!
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