OpenWetWare talk:Nature Methods article: Difference between revisions

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*'''[[User:Jasonk|Jasonk]] 08:24, 30 October 2006 (EST):''' Looks good, thanks for taking the intiative on this.  I would suggest that we have a strong example of a consensus protocol that we could show to new members (as an example of good practice), and probably as a reference in the article itself (to give readers a working example as a proof of principle).  As mentioned in previous discussions [[DNA ligation]] is perhaps not in the best shape to serve this role, any suggestions for protocols that could be cleaned up and have an editor recruited?
*'''[[User:Jasonk|Jasonk]] 08:24, 30 October 2006 (EST):''' Looks good, thanks for taking the intiative on this.  I would suggest that we have a strong example of a consensus protocol that we could show to new members (as an example of good practice), and probably as a reference in the article itself (to give readers a working example as a proof of principle).  As mentioned in previous discussions [[DNA ligation]] is perhaps not in the best shape to serve this role, any suggestions for protocols that could be cleaned up and have an editor recruited?
**'''[[User:Jasonk|Jasonk]] 08:24, 30 October 2006 (EST):'''re: The "official editor" of the protocol -- this is going to be a little tricky I think.  I don't think its a good idea to provide a person with "edit approval" at the software level (in fact its not realy easily technically feasible anyway), but you could imagine editors having a socially-mandated final say over the article (sort of like I consider myself to have the final say over my userpage even though anyone can edit it).  Should a dispute arise (e.g. a "revert war" as it would be called on wikipedia), the SC could mediate.  other thoughts on this, the general idea of someone having "editor status" over a general page is something we haven't done previously.  Do people think it would hurt contributions?  My guess is it would be a net positive, since the editor at least would have incentive to do the work of aggregating accross lab-specific protocols, something were not seeing too much of at the moment.
**'''[[User:Jasonk|Jasonk]] 08:24, 30 October 2006 (EST):'''re: The "official editor" of the protocol -- this is going to be a little tricky I think.  I don't think its a good idea to provide a person with "edit approval" at the software level (in fact its not realy easily technically feasible anyway), but you could imagine editors having a socially-mandated final say over the article (sort of like I consider myself to have the final say over my userpage even though anyone can edit it).  Should a dispute arise (e.g. a "revert war" as it would be called on wikipedia), the SC could mediate.  other thoughts on this, the general idea of someone having "editor status" over a general page is something we haven't done previously.  Do people think it would hurt contributions?  My guess is it would be a net positive, since the editor at least would have incentive to do the work of aggregating accross lab-specific protocols, something were not seeing too much of at the moment.
*'''[[User:Rshetty|Reshma]] 09:05, 30 October 2006 (EST)''': Awesome idea.  We've been talking about how we should publish something regarding OpenWetWare.  One thing that I think will be important to emphasize in the article is that OWW goes one step further than most other online protocol sites like Nature Methods, CSHL protocols and protocols online.  Namely, that it is easily editable and that everyone can edit the same space.  We should discuss the pros and cons of this approach as well as try to dispel some of the [[OpenWetWare:FAQ|common concerns]].  I'll think about this a bit and try to write something up.

Revision as of 07:05, 30 October 2006

user:jamesh008 30/10/06 11.52GMT: Let me know what you think.

  • Jasonk 08:24, 30 October 2006 (EST): Looks good, thanks for taking the intiative on this. I would suggest that we have a strong example of a consensus protocol that we could show to new members (as an example of good practice), and probably as a reference in the article itself (to give readers a working example as a proof of principle). As mentioned in previous discussions DNA ligation is perhaps not in the best shape to serve this role, any suggestions for protocols that could be cleaned up and have an editor recruited?
    • Jasonk 08:24, 30 October 2006 (EST):re: The "official editor" of the protocol -- this is going to be a little tricky I think. I don't think its a good idea to provide a person with "edit approval" at the software level (in fact its not realy easily technically feasible anyway), but you could imagine editors having a socially-mandated final say over the article (sort of like I consider myself to have the final say over my userpage even though anyone can edit it). Should a dispute arise (e.g. a "revert war" as it would be called on wikipedia), the SC could mediate. other thoughts on this, the general idea of someone having "editor status" over a general page is something we haven't done previously. Do people think it would hurt contributions? My guess is it would be a net positive, since the editor at least would have incentive to do the work of aggregating accross lab-specific protocols, something were not seeing too much of at the moment.
  • Reshma 09:05, 30 October 2006 (EST): Awesome idea. We've been talking about how we should publish something regarding OpenWetWare. One thing that I think will be important to emphasize in the article is that OWW goes one step further than most other online protocol sites like Nature Methods, CSHL protocols and protocols online. Namely, that it is easily editable and that everyone can edit the same space. We should discuss the pros and cons of this approach as well as try to dispel some of the common concerns. I'll think about this a bit and try to write something up.