- From: Martynas Jusevičius <martynas@graphity.org>
- Date: Mon, 6 Oct 2014 19:09:46 +0200
- To: "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com>
- Cc: Phillip Lord <phillip.lord@newcastle.ac.uk>, Luca Matteis <lmatteis@gmail.com>, Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>, Daniel Schwabe <dschwabe@inf.puc-rio.br>, W3C Semantic Web IG <semantic-web@w3.org>, W3C LOD Mailing List <public-lod@w3.org>, "Eric Prud'hommeaux" <eric@w3.org>, Bernadette Hyland <bhyland@3roundstones.com>
Following the same logic, we still could have been using paper submissions? All you have to do is to scan them to turn them into PDFs. It's been a while since I was in the university, but wasn't dissemination an important part of science? What about "dogfooding" after all? Martynas On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 6:48 PM, Peter F. Patel-Schneider <pfpschneider@gmail.com> wrote: > It's not hard to query PDFs with SPARQL. All you have to do is extract the > metadata from the document and turn it into RDF, if needed. Lots of > programs extract and display this metadata already. > > No, I don't think that viewing this issue from the reviewer perspective is > too narrow. Reviewers form a vital part of the scientific publishing > process. Anything that makes their jobs harder or the results that they > produce worse is going to have to have very large benefits over the current > setup. In any case, I haven't been looking at the reviewer perspective > only, even in the message quoted below. > > peter > > PS: This is *not* to say that I think that the reviewing process is > anywhere near ideal. On the contrary, I think that the reviewing process > has many problems, particularly as it is performed in CS conferences. > > > > On 10/06/2014 09:19 AM, Martynas Jusevičius wrote: >> >> Dear Peter, >> >> please show me how to query PDFs with SPARQL. Then I'll believe there >> are no benefits of XHTML+RDFa over PDF. >> >> Addressing the issue from the reviewer perspective only is too narrow, >> don't you think? >> >> >> Martynas >> >> On Mon, Oct 6, 2014 at 6:08 PM, Peter F. Patel-Schneider >> <pfpschneider@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>> On 10/06/2014 08:38 AM, Phillip Lord wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>> "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com> writes: >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I would be totally astonished if using htlatex as the main way to >>>>> produce >>>>> conference papers were as simple as this. >>>>> >>>>> I just tried htlatex on my ISWC paper, and the result was, to put it >>>>> mildly, >>>>> horrible. (One of my AAAI papers was about the same, the other one >>>>> caused an >>>>> undefined control sequence and only produced one page of output.) >>>>> Several >>>>> parts of the paper were rendered in fixed-width fonts. There was no >>>>> attempt >>>>> to limit line length. Footnotes were in separate files. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> The footnote thing is pretty strange, I have to agree. Although >>>> "footnotes" are a fairly alien concept wrt to the web. Probably hover >>>> overs would be a reasonable presentation for this. >>>> >>>> >>>>> Many non-scalable images were included, even for simple math. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> It does MathML I think, which is then rendered client side. Or you could >>>> drop math-mode straight through and render client side with mathjax. >>> >>> >>> >>> Well, somehow png files are being produced for some math, which is a >>> failure. I don't know what the way to do this right would be, I just >>> know >>> that the version of htlatex for Fedora 20 fails to reasonably handle the >>> math in this paper. >>> >>>>> My carefully designed layout for examples was modified in ways that >>>>> made the examples harder to understand. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Perhaps this is a key difference between us. I don't care about the >>>> layout, and want someone to do it for me; it's one of the reasons I use >>>> latex as well. >>> >>> >>> >>> There are many cases where line breaks and indentation are important for >>> understanding. Getting this sort of presentation right in latex is a >>> pain >>> for starters, but when it has been done, having the htlatex toolchain >>> mess >>> it up is a failure. >>> >>>>> That said, the result was better than I expected. If someone upgrades >>>>> htlatex >>>>> to work well I'm quite willing to use it, but I expect that a lot of >>>>> work >>>>> is >>>>> going to be needed. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Which gets us back to the chicken and egg situation. I would probably do >>>> this; but, at the moment, ESWC and ISWC won't let me submit it. So, I'll >>>> end up with the PDF output anyway. >>> >>> >>> >>> Well, I'm with ESWC and ISWC here. The review process should be designed >>> to >>> make reviewing easy for reviewers. Until viewing HTML output is as >>> trouble-free as viewing PDF output, then PDF should be the required >>> format. >>> >>>> This is why it is important that web conferences allow HTML, which is >>>> where the argument started. If you want something that prints just >>>> right, PDF is the thing for you. If you you want to read your papers in >>>> the bath, likewise, PDF is the thing for you. And that's fine by me (so >>>> long as you don't mind me reading your papers in the bath!). But it >>>> needs to not be the only option. >>> >>> >>> >>> Why? What are the benefits of HTML reviewing, right now? What are the >>> benefits of HTML publishing, right now? If there were HTML-based tools >>> that >>> worked well for preparing, reviewing, and reading scientific papers, then >>> maybe conferences would use them. However, conference organizers and >>> reviewers have limited time, and are thus going for the simplest solution >>> that works well. >>> >>> If some group thinks that a good HTML-based solution is possible, then >>> let >>> them produce this solution. If the group can get pre-approval of some >>> conference, then more power to them. However, I'm not going to vote for >>> any >>> pre-approval of some future solution when the current situation is >>> satisficing. >>> >>>> Phil >>> >>> >>> >>> peter >>> >>> >
Received on Monday, 6 October 2014 17:10:15 UTC