Dear list, Having already noted on Twitter that this list is rather quiet, I thought I'd post something to (hopefully) generate debate: As a student primarily concerned with palaeo-morpho-phylo data, I'm rather disheartened by the lack of progress in data archiving and publishing standards, particularly in the palaeontological research community. What's worse is. I get the feeling (some) people just don't care. They can seem oblivious to the benefits. Ignorant to the lost re-purposing potential. A tiny few evolution and ecology journals have recently changed editorial policy for the better -> So what? These journals are a just a drop in the ocean of what's out there that publish phylogenetic analyses, particularly palaeo-phylo analyses. How many systematic palaeontologists know or care about ontologies and/or XML-schema? It's all fine and well creating wonderfully clever linked architectures for data, but if the primary data-producers don't know about them, nor want the additional 'hassle' (no matter how little hassle it is), these brilliant data-networks may remain relatively empty. Community-change is needed, first-and-foremost I argue. The question I ask is how? Regards, Ross PS I find it gratingly ironic that Palaeontologists have an extremely faithfully updated public database for taxonomic and stratigraphic occurrence records: http://paleodb.org/ Why are MorphoBank and/or TreeBASE not as popular? -- -/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/- Ross Mounce PhD Student Fossils, Phylogeny and Macroevolution Research Group University of Bath 4 South Building, Lab 1.07 http://bit.ly/rossmounce http://www.citeulike.org/user/rossmounce -/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-