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So how does the notion of "paradigms" help us here?

It's clear there's been a fairly consistent paradigm for scientific publishing since 1665, and its been the paper journal. From 1995 to 2000, something new arrived -the electronic journal. For those of us closely involved in the process - John Sack, Bill Wistcher, Kent Anderson - it's been an exciting and messy and sometimes exhausting time, and what we've ended up with is a new paradigm, that we can call slightly "the traditional online journal."

So I want to situate myself here - on reasonably firm ground. Most of my talk will be concerned with looking back -how did we get from there to here. But I really want to turn around and look ahead too. Between these two we'll cover all the bmj.com’s new initiatives – realised and planned - the advertised title of this talk.

Some caveats:

My position is accurately described as editor, bmj.com. The BMJ Publishing Group has websites for another 30 odd specialist journals, books, and other more exotic confections. I don't run those divisions; in some cases they have radically different notions from mine. Lack of consensus is not a problem – one of the 4 aims of our group strategy is to Embrace experimentation."

BMJ centric What you're getting is the view from a general medical journal, not a specialist journal. (JAMA ---NEJM, Lancet)

Alllowed to travel around. Realisation that one size does not fit all.