- The kerfuffle about the institutional subscription price of Scientific American continues. For those of you joining the discussion late, Nature Publishing Group is now integrating it into the Nature journals web site, offering a back file, and perpetual access to what you've purchased. Nothing will be pulled from Ebsco but I guess at some point new stuff won't be added. Ok, that's sounds fine, right? The only thing is that the institutional subscription price will go from $40 to $300 in one year. That is, in one year in which everyone is canceling lots of titles. Teri Vogel from UCSD pointed to this press release with updates. ARGH. So my take is that this generally makes business sense for Nature - they're trying to fill in the spectrum from popular communication, news, to full journal on one platform. I'm sure the thing will be more usable. I'm not sure the price is even that out of whack - it's just that this is NOT the right time for this. People don't have that money. I guess Nature is hoping that the libraries will have to re-subscribe when their patrons see SciAm when they're looking for Nature and want it?
- On a happier note they're gearing up for LISA VI coming up in Pune, India. LISA stands for Library and Information Services in Astronomy and it will be hosted by the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA) Library and the National Centre for Radio Astrophysics (NCRA) Library in Pune, Maharashtra, India, from February 14 to 17, 2010. Find out more here.
- Are you a library student? Then consider submitting a paper to the DTIC student paper competition. DTIC is the Defense (as in Department of...) Technical Information Center. They manage and provide access to science and technology information including technical reports for the DOD. They are looking for papers on any topic of interest to science and technology related to their mission. They'll help you with travel expenses to their conference in March in Alexandria, VA. (note: I have been asked to be a reviewer for the papers so can't help you with topics).
- NTRS is finally back up! NTRS is the NASA Technical Report Server and they'd been down since the last week of September. Many of us were fretting because we rely on them for free (paid for by tax dollars) full text access to technical reports in all sorts of areas related to aerospace, propulsion, materials, astro...
Christina's LIS Rant
This is my blog on library and information science.
Profile
Christina K. Pikas is a science and engineering librarian in a special library as well as a doctoral student in information studies.
Any opinions expressed here may not even be her own and certainly do not represent those of any organization willing to be affiliated with her.
Search
Recent Posts
- Yeah, me too.
- Very cool - American Physical Society offers free access to public libraries
- Michael Pater, Connecticut artist, died today
- Hey maybe scientists should do more than just wait for their journal to issue a press release on their new fabu article
- Well, sometimes you just have to Google it
- SIGIR 2010 is going on right now
- Across disciplines, what motivates or prevents faculty self archiving?
- Broke something last night - all fixed now
- Why this information industry land grab is different
- Library parody of the Old Spice ads - this is hilarious
Recent Comments
- dweiums on Library parody of the Old Spice ads - this is hilarious
- Martin Fenner on Yeah, me too.
- Christina Pikas on Yeah, me too.
- Jodi Schneider on Yeah, me too.
- uqbar on Very cool - American Physical Society offers free access to public libraries
- Christina Pikas on Well, sometimes you just have to Google it
- ranggaw0636 on Well, sometimes you just have to Google it
- Christina Pikas on Well, sometimes you just have to Google it
- Estraven on Hey maybe scientists should do more than just wait for their journal to issue a press release on their new fabu article
- Passerby on Well, sometimes you just have to Google it
Archives
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
Geography
Where am I?
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0.
« OT: Still very frustrated | Main | One interface for everyone for every need? »
Quick takes
Category: Information Science
Posted on: October 8, 2009 7:02 AM, by Christina Pikas
TrackBacks
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/121790


Comments
Interesting. Not content with having chewed up and spat out the monograph market, serials publishers are now turning on each other.
This will end messily.
Posted by: Dorothea Salo | October 8, 2009 8:43 AM
Institutional site licenses for Scientific American are also increasing to preposterous levels (More than three times the new print price for us!).
We will continue to subscribe for now, but with a new round of budget cuts for the SUNY system, SciAm may be one of the things to go - especially with the amount of high quality science news available on the web (from a variety of sources)
Posted by: Bonnie | October 9, 2009 12:43 PM