This publisher is new; all the journals that have content began publishing in 2012 (except for the Computing Science and Technology International Journal, which started in August 2011 and has a website that looks different from all the others). The coverage of its individual journals is broad, enabling the publisher to accept more papers and earn more revenue.
The publisher whose name appears on the “about us” page is Dr. Richard Harter. He lists addresses in Santa Clara and Stanford, California, and in Terre Haute, Indiana. There is no authority record for him in OCLC, and I was unsuccessful at finding information about this person in Google.
Regarding the author fees, the publisher states, “Authors of accepted papers are requested to arrange page charges of their papers at the rate of $200 (maximum 10 pages). Extra pages beyond 10 pages will be charged at the cost of $40 per page.” The whole idea of a page charge is silly in an electronic environment. This method of charging is simply a way to get more money out of their customers, the authors.
The journals appear to have ample editorial boards, but a closer look reveals that the same names appear on more than one board. For example, I see that a Dr. Tad Foster from Indiana State University is on the editorial boards of at least four different journals, as are many other individuals.
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This publisher is new; all the journals that have content began publishing in 2012 (except for the Computing Science and Technology International Journal, which started in August 2011 and has a website that looks different from all the others). The coverage of its individual journals is broad, enabling the publisher to accept more papers and earn more revenue.The publisher whose name appears on the “about us” page is Dr. Richard Harter. He lists addresses in Santa Clara and Stanford, California, and in Terre Haute, Indiana. There is no authority record for him in OCLC, and I was unsuccessful at finding information about this person in Google.Regarding the author fees, the publisher states, “Authors of accepted papers are requested to arrange page charges of their papers at the rate of $200 (maximum 10 pages). Extra pages beyond 10 pages will be charged at the cost of $40 per page.” The whole idea of a page charge is silly in an electronic environment. This method of charging is simply a way to get more money out of their customers, the authors.The journals appear to have ample editorial boards, but a closer look reveals that the same names appear on more than one board. For example, I see that a Dr. Tad Foster from Indiana State University is on the editorial boards of at least four different journals, as are many other individuals..
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