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Elsevier’s Theoretical and Applied Fracture Mechanics live (free of charge) webinars: save dates & links!

Submitted by lsusmel on

Esteemed Colleague,

as the Editor-in-Chief of Theoretical and Applied Fracture Mechanics (TAFMech, https://www.journals.elsevier.com/theoretical-and-applied-fracture-mechanics/), this post is to invite you to attend the following free on-line global live webinars on Fracture Mechanics-related topics:

 

Þ Prof. David McDowell – Georgia Tech Institute for Materials, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Elsevier’s Theoretical and Applied Fracture Mechanics live (free of charge) webinars: save dates & links!

Submitted by lsusmel on

Esteemed Colleague,

as the Editor-in-Chief of Theoretical and Applied Fracture Mechanics (TAFMech, https://www.journals.elsevier.com/theoretical-and-applied-fracture-mechanics/), this post is to invite you to attend the following free on-line global live webinars on Fracture Mechanics-related topics:

 

Þ Prof. David McDowell – Georgia Tech Institute for Materials, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Elsevier's Authors' update 3rd Issue now available!

Submitted by Laure Ballu on

In this 3rd issue of Elsevier's Authors' Update, we're bringing you top tips to develop your career, and tools to help you publish ethically. We've also got the latest news from the UN-sponsored programme Research4Life and a new report on the challenges facing US research universities.  To access it, go to http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/authorsview.authors/authorsupdate

Prof. Neil Stephen is honoured for his outstanding engineering research paper

Submitted by Laure Ballu on

Neil Stephen, Professor of Structural Mechanics at the University of Southampton and editorial board member of the International Journal of Solids and Structures has received the first Doak Prize for an outstanding journal paper On Energy Harvesting from Ambient Vibration (JSV, 293,1/2, pp 409-425).

LiquidPub Project: Scientific Publications meet the Web, a project from University of Trento

Submitted by Mike Ciavarella on
Liquid Publications: Scientific Publications meet the Web

Some very interesting projects from University of Trento. Changing the way scientific knowledge is produced, disseminated, evaluated, and consumed

Why is Google cool, but Elsevier is not?

Submitted by Zhigang Suo on

Elsevier-bashing has become a sport among researchers.  The company is singled out, among publishers of research journals, perhaps because it is the largest.  We might as well use Elsevier as a representative of the publishers, and hard-working people at Elsevier should not be offended.