Friday 1 February 2008

After the Impressive Results for the WSEAS Journals (see SJR factors below), we have started now

After the Impressive Results for the WSEAS Journals (see SJR factors
below), we have started now
the FREE and OPEN Publication of the PDF of the accepted papers on the
Web.

Free for all the Scientists to Publish & Free to Download everything!

So, our authors will be able to receive more citations.
This is necessary for the WSEAS impact, since now all the PDFs will be
open for all and we must
be competitive regarding the scientific quality.

The main criterion for publication is: Scientific Quality: Original
Work, Breakthrough Publications that
will bring CITATIONS to the Authors and to the WSEAS of course.


Example of OPEN PDFs
http://www.worldses.org/journals/economics/economics-march2007.htm

Simultaneously, the Journals will be published in HARD COPY. If
somebody needs the hard copy, he will pay
the cost.

* Unfortunately for the old issues we cannot open their PDFs because
we have some constraints
from the subscribers.

On the other hand, WSEAS puts the bar for acceptance extremely high.
We have given instructions to the Reviewers.
See: http://www.worldses.org/review/index.html

Our Statistics for the WSEAS Journals say that for every 10 papers, 1
is accepted and 9 is rejected, approximately. We are waiting the
review of extended papers from July 2007 - December 2007 to announce
the official statistics per journal. Up to now, the rejection rate is
approximately: 10% accepted, 90% rejected
(For Conferences: See for each conference the link:
http://www.wseas.org/reports/)

Please, forward this message to your colleagues.


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SJR factors for 6 WSEAS Journals

WSEAS Transactions on Computers: 0,038 (SJR 2006)
WSEAS Transactions on Information Science and Applications: 0,039 (SJR
2006)
WSEAS Transactions on Circuits and Systems: 0,039 (SJR 2006)
WSEAS Transactions on Communications: 0,039 (SJR 2006)
WSEAS Transactions on Electronics: 0,038 (SJR 2006)
WSEAS Transactions on Systems: 0,038 (SJR 2006)
WSEAS Transactions on Mathematics: 0,039 (SJR 2006)

FOR COMPARISON:
Microwave and Optical Technology Letters, Wiley: 0,076 (SJR 2006)
IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation: 0,140 (SJR 2006)
IEEE Transactions on Communications: 0,093 (SJR 2006)
IEEE Transactions on Energy Conversion: 0,076 (SJR 2006)
IEEE Transactions on Education: 0,051 (SJR 2006)
IEEE Transactions on Industrial Informatics: 0,049 (SJR 2006)
IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech and Language Processing: 0,000
(SJR 2006)

http://environmentalpolicy.blogspot.com/2008/01/dear-wseas-members-be-a
ware-of-bogus.html

http://wseas2007.wordpress.com/2008/01/18/black-propaganda-junk-emails-
bogus-web-pages-and-meetings-against-his-beatitude-archbishop-christodo
ulos/

http://e-wseas.livejournal.com/

http://bogus-software.blogspot.com/
http://evolution-wseas.blogspot.com/
http://wseas-mit.blogspot.com/
http://environmentalpolicy.blogspot.com/
http://spoudastes.blogspot.com/
http://album-for-christodoulos.blogspot.com/

http://isi-publisher.blogspot.com/
http://sfaka.blogspot.com/
http://creation-and-evolution.blogspot.com/
http://net-tutorial.blogspot.com/

http://ethnika.blogspot.com/
http://emotionalscientists.blogspot.com/
http://album-for-christodoulos.blogspot.com
http://shuchenlee.blogspot.com/

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NEWS in TECHNOLOGY -- OUR TECHNOLOGICAL NEWS:


ISP Internode has added a multiline option to its NodePhone VoIP
service, describing the move as a key step in the evolution of
NodePhone into a fully featured, corporate-grade IP telephony service.

A standard NodePhone service comes with two voice channels. Customers
can now request additional lines themselves using NodePhone's online
toolbox. The fee is $10 per channel per month, plus a one off $20
change request charge. The multiline facility delivers extra call
capacity by providing additional channels when NodePhone is connected
to an IP-based PBX system.

Internode�s product manager for NodePhone, Jim Kellett, said: "a
rapidly growing business that requires 10 more voice channels for
their phone system can now place their order online, without any human
intervention or queue bottlenecks, and have the extra channels up and
running within a few minutes. If they only need this extra capacity
for a limited period, they can just as easily relinquish any surplus
channels when the demand is over."

He added: "As a comparison, a traditional ISDN phone service can up to
four weeks to provision, can cost more than $800 in upgrade fees and
generally incurs nearly three times the cost per channel. Extra
channels for ISDN primary rate services must also be ordered in groups
of 10."

NodePhone was launched in 2005 and in 2007 signed up its 10,000th
customer. Kellett said Internode intended to continue enhancing its
NodePhone service throughout 2008. "Our goal is make NodePhone the IP
telephony service of choice for Australian businesses."

The multiline option is only for customers with their own IP PBX. In
April 2007, Internode launched NodePhone2 : an IP centrex service
using the BroadSoft BroadWorks hosted IP telephony platform. Internode
claims that, unlike many VoIP offerings NodePhone does not rely on the
unpredictability of the Internet: traffic is carried entirely on
Internode's private IP network to and from the interconnection point
with the public switched telephone network. However, users do not have
to be on an Internode broadband access to use NodePhone.

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