Barry Mahon writes
>  The actual technical aspects of the database loading may be
> irrelevant but there is an important corollorary - secondary
> information services (abstracting and indexing) play an increasingly
> important role as the primary literature becomes more and more
> diffused in the location of its primary publication. These are
> certainly not free - it costs a lot of money to collect and collate
> the material, even though a number of the organisations doing this
> work are non-profit, such as Chemical Abstracts, Inspec, etc.
  There are free abstract and indexing services around, see
  CiteSeer, 
http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/cs, DBLP, see
  
http://www.informatik.uni-trier.de/~ley/db/, for computer
  science and RePEc, 
http://repec.org, for economics.
  I am the principal founder of RePEc and I am in the process of
  implementing the ideas behind this collection for Computing
  and Library and Information Science, see 
http://rclis.org. Not
  much there yet, though, because such systems take a long
  time to be produce.
>  BTW, ICSTI will be holding a meeting in January 2004 on the topic
> of the 'new economic models'
  The trick is to get the community involed, in that way you
  minimize cost on a central collection. The RePEc collection
  illustrates this masterfully.
  Cheers,
  Thomas Krichel                      mailto:krichel_at_openlib.org
  visiting CO PAH, Novosibirsk   
http://openlib.org/home/krichel
                             RePEc:per:1965-06-05:thomas_krichel
Received on Sat Aug 16 2003 - 07:53:05 BST