[Air-L] Conferencing software for next year
jeremy hunsinger
jhuns at vt.edu
Thu Oct 23 09:51:28 PDT 2008
yep, it is all pkp to me:)
On Oct 23, 2008, at 12:49 PM, Michael Zimmer wrote:
> I think Jeremy means OCS (open conference system), which, clearly,
> is closely aligned with OJS (open journal system). To me, that
> integration is a meaningful advantage of using OCS, and I concur
> with Jeremy's insight that this might be more an issue of policy/
> practice, rather than the technology.
>
> -mz
>
> --
> Michael Zimmer, PhD
> Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies
> Associate, Center for Information Policy Research
> University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
> e: zimmerm at uwm.edu
> w: www.michaelzimmer.org
>
>
> On Oct 23, 2008, at 11:37 AM, jeremy hunsinger wrote:
>
>> Ben makes an interesting point. 'The imagination of the program
>> chair' what what brought me oh prolly around 500 or so hours of
>> labor over several years. In fact, it was the constant
>> requirements of the reimagining of process of program chairs that
>> forced the move to OJS from a custom system. The idea was that, we
>> can no longer afford to invest in endless customization and
>> specifically the endless re-imagination of the conference and the
>> conference process. We need a fixed model, and OJS was what was
>> supposed to help to enforce that fixedness, but really it doesn't
>> seem to have accomplished that, so perhaps we should resolve the
>> problem more through policy than through getting a new system? the
>> system ojs system does seem to work for many different conferences.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Oct 23, 2008, at 11:07 AM, Ben Anderson wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> On 22 Oct 2008, at 18:34, Ingbert Floyd wrote:
>>>
>>>> I think it would be interesting to see a group discussion of
>>>> conference system requirements by internet experts.
>>>
>>> one such 'requirement' is that the system can support the
>>> 'submission/review/response workflow' that the conference
>>> organizers want. My experience of the IR9 review process (others
>>> may disagree) was that whilst the progamme chair & reviewers had a
>>> view of the process they wanted, the system had a slightly
>>> different and rather 'fixed' model. This produced a certain amount
>>> of confusion.
>>>
>>> If the IR10 programme chair/committee's mental model of the
>>> submission process is not yet defined then deciding on a tool will
>>> be a bit premature...(unless you are happy to adapt your process
>>> to what the tool(s) provide)
>>>
>>> Ben
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>
>
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