From: Roy S. <roy...@ic...> - 2011-06-24 20:31:56
|
Dear libMesh users: We are pleased to announce the launch of the Archive of Numerical Software (ANS). ANS is a free, peer-reviewed, high quality, open-access journal publishing research of numerical methods that are implemented based on, or extend certain large-scale numerical libraries, including libMesh. ANS's distinctive feature -- furthering the goal of encouraging the reuse of software -- is that articles must be accompanied by the computer code (under an OSI-approved open source license) from which results were obtained. We are committed to establishing and maintaining high standards of code usability, documentation, and reproducibility, considering both the code itself as well as accompanying manuscripts. The journal is hosted by the Texas Digital Library and can be found at http://journals.tdl.org/ans Its mission statement, policies and submission guidelines can also be found there. Best regards, --- Roy Stogner |
From: Vijay S. M. <vi...@gm...> - 2011-06-24 21:10:59
|
Roy, I wanted to ask this to Guido in the deal.ii list but anyway here is my question. Is this journal for papers based on completely open source software alone that can be replicated/verified by anyone ? What I mean is that if I use say petsc+libMesh+my own framework, does the journal require me to make my framework + test code open source in order to be accepted ? Just clarifying. IMO, it is a great effort in the right direction and having contributed to the open source initiative in the past, I am happy to see that it is getting a little more structure in the scientific community. Best, Vijay On Fri, Jun 24, 2011 at 3:31 PM, Roy Stogner <roy...@ic...> wrote: > > Dear libMesh users: > > We are pleased to announce the launch of the Archive of Numerical > Software (ANS). ANS is a free, peer-reviewed, high quality, open-access > journal publishing research of numerical methods that are implemented > based on, or extend certain large-scale numerical libraries, including > libMesh. > > ANS's distinctive feature -- furthering the goal of encouraging the > reuse of software -- is that articles must be accompanied by the > computer code (under an OSI-approved open source license) from which > results were obtained. We are committed to establishing and > maintaining high standards of code usability, documentation, and > reproducibility, considering both the code itself as well as > accompanying manuscripts. > > The journal is hosted by the Texas Digital Library and can be found at > http://journals.tdl.org/ans > Its mission statement, policies and submission guidelines can also be > found there. > > Best regards, > --- > Roy Stogner > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a > definitive record of customers, application performance, security > threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes > sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense.. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2d-c1 > _______________________________________________ > Libmesh-devel mailing list > Lib...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/libmesh-devel > |
From: John P. <jwp...@gm...> - 2011-06-24 21:14:26
|
On Fri, Jun 24, 2011 at 3:10 PM, Vijay S. Mahadevan <vi...@gm...> wrote: > Roy, > > I wanted to ask this to Guido in the deal.ii list but anyway here is > my question. > > Is this journal for papers based on completely open source software > alone that can be replicated/verified by anyone ? What I mean is that > if I use say petsc+libMesh+my own framework, does the journal require > me to make my framework + test code open source in order to be > accepted ? Just clarifying. Yes. Submitted software must have an OSI-approved license. -- John |