[Tdwg-guid] [Taxacom] Demise of Phyloinformatics journal

Weitzman, Anna WEITZMAN at si.edu
Fri Nov 24 16:31:17 CET 2006


All of Phyloinformatics is still available from the Internet Archive.  See http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.Phyloinformatics.org .
 
I tested it out and downloaded one article as a full pdf.
 
Cheers,
Anna
 
Anna L. Weitzman, PhD
Botanical and Biodiversity Informatics Research
National Museum of Natural History
Smithsonian Institution
 
202.633.0846
weitzman at si.edu

________________________________

From: tdwg-guid-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu on behalf of Paul Kirk
Sent: Fri 24-Nov-06 9:07 AM
To: Thomas Lammers; Roderic Page
Cc: Taxacom; tdwg-guid at mailman.nhm.ku.edu; evoldir at evol.biology.mcmaster.ca; Dennis DeGreve
Subject: Re: [Tdwg-guid] [Taxacom] Demise of Phyloinformatics journal



anyone got a red flag ... I need to drive my horseless carriage home
shortly ... ;-)

-----Original Message-----
From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
[mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Thomas Lammers
Sent: 24 November 2006 14:02
To: Roderic Page
Cc: 'Taxacom'; tdwg-guid at mailman.nhm.ku.edu;
evoldir at evol.biology.mcmaster.ca; Dennis DeGreve
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Demise of Phyloinformatics journal

----- Original Message -----
From: Roderic Page <r.page at bio.gla.ac.uk>

> The Open Access web-only journal "Phyloinformatics" seems to have
disappeared, with the Internet address http://www.phyloinformatics.org
now up for sale. This means the articles have just disappeared!
There weren't many papers published, but some were interesting and have
been cited in the mainstream literature. This also illustrates the
problems with linking to digital resources using URLs, as opposed to
identifiers such as DOIs. With the loss of  the domain name, this
journal has effectively died.  A sobering lesson...<

Indeed.  Particularly for those who think the Codes should permit
description of new taxa electronically.   This highlights what utter
nonsense and folly such a move would be.  Chasing after "the latest
thing" and "the current trend" is fine for teenyboppers, fashion, and
music.  As scientists, however, we have an obligation to posterity to
eschew such foolishness.

Tom Lammers

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