[TOS] FOSS Journals
Gregory Hislop
hislopg at drexel.edu
Fri Jan 27 12:37:00 UTC 2012
While different than journals, there are some conferences that have a focus on FOSS. The conference run by IFIP working group 2.13 is one (http://ifipwg213.org/). Also the conference on mining software repositories has a lot of FOSS related material (http://2012.msrconf.org/).
Cheers,
Greg Hislop
-----Original Message-----
From: tos-bounces at teachingopensource.org [mailto:tos-bounces at teachingopensource.org] On Behalf Of Mel Chua
Sent: Thursday, January 26, 2012 10:14 PM
To: TOS List
Subject: Re: [TOS] FOSS Journals
On 01/26/2012 01:51 PM, Don Davis wrote:
> Which (FOSS) journals are list members reading/relying on/submitting to?
> I'm looking for journals outside the scope of IEEE and ACM...
I... would love to know if people have better ideas, because I've had
multi-hour sit-down sessions with *three* librarians from *different*
libraries by now and we're still scratching our heads a bit.
FOSS-centric journals (in English, anyway)? I've found one:
http://www.igi-global.com/journal/international-journal-open-source-software/1123
-- which as far as I can tell is (1) expensive and (2) not in my library
(I can check, though). So I haven't gotten to take a look to see what
it's got and how good it is. If anyone has access to this I would *love*
to hear what you think of it (even as a quick glance) -- is it worth me
asking librarians at Purdue to help me chase it down? The articles look
super-interesting:
http://www.igi-global.com/journal-contents/international-journal-open-source-software/1123
And then there's random stuff here and there. You said you were looking
outside ACM and IEEE, so here goes.
I've found some FOSS-related papers in the International Journal of
Software Engineering & Knowledge Engineering (for example: "An empirical
analysis of the open source development process based on mining of
source code repositories") There's also stuff like "Public participation
in proprietary software development through user roles and discourse" in
the International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, and at least one
Wikipedia-related article in the International Journal of Technology
Management ("'Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia' as a role model? Lessons
for open innovation from an exploratory examination of the supposedly
democratic-anarchic nature of Wikipedia.")
In other words, it's scattershot. There doesn't seem to be a rhyme or
reason to this yet. You can start ranging outside computing-related
stuff into the fields of law and econ, anthro and sociology, management
studies... I mean, if that's what you're looking for, I can share more
stuff, but it's probably a little far afield -- and pretty much equally
scattershot.
In my extremely limited "I've completed one semester of grad school"
experience (DISCLAIMER!), everything is... spotty. It's not like you'll
find tons of articles on open source in any one journal. And authors who
write about open source tend to write one article in one journal,
another article in another journal... so as far as I can tell it's
impossible to fix your sights on a few targets and harvest a continuing
stream of good information, you have to constantly hunter-gatherer.
But then again, that's what happens when stuff is emergent -- or so I'm
told. Maybe my professors are trying to make me feel better, though. :)
--Mel
_______________________________________________
tos mailing list
tos at teachingopensource.org
http://lists.teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos
More information about the tos
mailing list