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Scott what do you think is going to be a successor to the scientific paper/academic journal? What do you think of platforms like distill.pub and Fermat's Library and the impact they might have?


I'd seen Fermat's Library but haven't used it. I hadn't heard of distill.pub before your comment.

Honestly, I don't see scientific papers going away anytime soon. What's the alternative to an individual or group setting out clearly in writing what they discovered, the evidence that it's true, and the background and context to the discovery, putting the writeup where interested people can easily find it, and then taking full responsibility for it, so others can cite and build on the work? As far as I'm concerned, that's all a "scientific paper" means---regardless of whether it appears in a prestigious journal or just the arXiv or somewhere else on the web, and whether it otherwise follows normal academic writing conventions or flouts them. Even an answer on a website like MathOverflow, were it sufficiently well-written and sourced, could as far as I'm concerned be cited as a research paper and given academic credit.

But while "papers," for some definition, are probably here to stay, I'm optimistic about deep reform to the system of journals. The first step, of course, should be for academics to shake off the yoke of the truly brazen predatory publishers like Elsevier. Many of us have already pledged never again to review for or submit to those publishers, at least until they fundamentally change their practices. For more about this, see my review of "The Access Principle": https://www.scottaaronson.com/writings/journal.html

As the next step, we should break free even of society journals, insofar as they put research results behind a paywall. Everything---certainly if it was funded by the taxpayers---should be freely accessible on the web. (In math, CS, and physics, we already put essentially all our papers on the arXiv, where they're freely available, and have been doing that for ~25 years. But the fact that the paywalls even exist still rankles---and other fields, like biology, have yet to catch up.)

Ultimately, we might converge on the model of journals as "arXiv overlays": that is, stamps of approval that particular arXiv preprints have been peer-reviewed (which is pretty much the only service that journals now provide anyway). Or maybe we'll even handle peer review in some other way entirely. E.g., people keep trying to experiment with peer reviews being public, but it keeps failing---possibly because, lo and behold, most academics don't want their frank commentary on the importance of each other's work to be made public with their names on it! :-)

As it happens, my friend and colleague Michael Nielsen used to work in quantum computing, but now spends full time at Y Combinator thinking about the future of scientific communication. He wrote a book that had lots of interesting ideas for how we could improve things, and surely there are many other good ideas waiting to be proposed, possibly taking advantage of recent or near-future technologies. While the concept of a "paper" (or treatise, or monograph, or note, or other unit of written research) strikes me as mostly determined by the nature of science itself, as far as I'm concerned almost everything else is up for grabs.



Alternatively you can create a bookmark that opens the comments page for every paper on Firefox. Here's the code: https://pastebin.com/4f4YbWvn


If you want to ask questions/add comments to the papers being presented, the Fermat's Library team set up a page for that http://fermatslibrary.com/nips


That's cool! For arXiv papers you can use Librarian: https://fermatslibrary.com/librarian


Out of curiosity, what was the most beautiful thing you've seen designed/made in LaTeX?



I bet Knuth wouldn't be happy to hear that LaTeX was used to design Business Cards


First, Knuth did TeX, Plain TeX, and was not the primary force behind LaTeX.

Second, IIRC, Knuth did proudly use TeX to print dinner menu, invitations, or some such.


>Knuth did proudly use TeX to print dinner menu

That's hilarious. Any sources on that?

That man is incredible.


I was typing quickly from memory. With The TeXBook, on page 411 he has a concert program; on page 248 he has a genealogy chart; on page 247 he has some nicely formatted stock tables; on pages 233, 236-7 he has some recipe stuff from Julia Child.

So, instead of a menu, I found a concert program and some recipes. Maybe there is a menu in there someplace.

He also has an addressed envelope where he used his Metafont in some tricky way to get something like a stamp. He might also be able to get from TeX with Metafont the whatever they are called little boxes of geometric gibberish used as identifiers.

I did some TeX macros for foils -- I get a nice box around each foil. Some more macros I did let me do a simple drawing in, say, old Microsoft Photodraw, include it in a picture in a TeX document, and then position TeX math as annotation overlays on the drawing. So, I can, say, draw a right triangle and put the standard Pythagorean theorem annotation on the figure. Can put darned nearly any TeX expression as annotation. TeX is nice and for math nearly essential.


>little boxes of geometric gibberish used as identifiers

in which context?


I struggled to understand that as well. Couldn't tell if it was about USPS barcodes (1) or QR codes (or other 2D barcodes) or something else?

[1] - https://www.neodynamic.com/Products/Help/BarcodeCF2.0/barcod...


I meant QR codes! I don't really know what they are!


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