Hi Marcus,

Thank you for the comments, I have been checking the link distribution
conditions and they say people can access the article only from the Oxford
Journals website for academic purposes, so here it is:

http://bioinformatics.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2013/07/09/bioinformatics.btt398.full.pdf?keytype=ref&ijkey=Y2j8jNeEKVNl0rD

Sorry for the inconvenience.
Cheers,

Hernán



2013/7/17 Marcus Denker <marcus.den...@inria.fr>

>
> On Jul 16, 2013, at 9:31 PM, Hernán Morales Durand <
> hernan.mora...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Doru, I can access the article through the "Full Text (PDF)" link at the
> right box titled "This Article". Maybe you have the right columns
> collapsed? There is an arrow button "Show all columns" if you cannot see
> the link.
> > Let me know.
> >
>
> Publishing is the act of making Paper in-accessible to the Public (that's
> where the name comes from).
>
> So what all serious publishers allow you to do is to make the version that
> you send them (not their version) available from your
> website and/or an online-archive of your employer,
>
> It is very important to do that, as people will not jump through hoops to
> get your paper (e.g. go to the library?).
> In the past I send emails to authors to get paper copies, but today I
> would just *never* do that. If *you* don't make your
> paper available, why should I bother? i will just not read it and not cite
> it.
>
> The journal publishing is just important for your CV and getting tenure
> and things like that, the paper the people
> really *read* is the one they can download from your website.
>
>         Marcus
>

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