I want to see it spread beyond computer programming libraries into areas where sharing is harder, like open source scientific equipment and fully reproducible methods in chemistry experiments.
The ACM (academic computer science group) has awarded prizes to these open source systems projects amongst others recently:
- Wireshark
- Jupyter
- GCC
- Mach
- Coq
- LLVM
- Eclipse
- make
- Java
- Tcl/Tk
The linked article is written like the academy never works on or recognises open source software or implementation work, or using open licences is unusual. That's not true.
In traditional (= non-CS) academia, proprietary software is still very much the norm, and as long as institutes get a free license for academic usage they also don't seem to care about open source too much. I don't know how much precedent there is, but such recognition from traditional academia still seems to be pretty rare and worthy of highlighting.
Top-tier open source libraries for cheminformatics (or other natural science -informatics flavours) would already be a welcome start.
Context: I do research in computational chemistry, and write an open source library for this, that could be used for cheminformatics too. I don't really know what is needed for this though, since I never touched cheminformatics.
https://orbi.uliege.be/bitstream/2268/154357/1/paper.pdf (2013)
https://amueller.github.io/papers/wo_the_machine_varoquaux.p... (2015)