Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Global Gateway: World Culture & Resources (Library of Congress)

Global Gateway: World Culture & Resources (Library of Congress) 

The Library of Congress Global Gateway: World Culture & Resources Digital Collections Collaborative Digital Libraries Digital Collections Centers for International Research The Library's 21 reading rooms provide access to unparalleled global information About the International Collections Information about comprehensive international print and electronic resources available at the Library Featured Presentations Selected items of international, cultural or historic importance from the Library's collections International Exhibitions Many exhibits on international themes are accessible through the Library's Exhibitions Web site Portals to the World Electronic resources on the nations of the world selected by Library of Congress subject experts Research Guides and Databases Search country studies, foreign law materials, specialized catalogs, digitized books and journals Research Opportunities Fellowships to pursue research in the collections of the Library of Congress administered by the Kluge Center International Cybercasts Videos of many public programs on international issues are available through the Cyber LC Web site

Global Gateway: World Culture & Resources (Library of Congress)

Home | ACToR | US EPA

Home | ACToR | US EPA 

ACToR (Aggregated Computational Toxicology Resource) is a collection of databases collated or developed by the US EPA National Center for Computational Toxicology (NCCT). More than 200 sources of publicly available data on environmental chemicals have been brought together and made searchable by chemical name and other identifiers, and by chemical structure. Data includes chemical structure, physico-chemical values, in vitro assay data and in vivo toxicology data. Chemicals include, but are not limited to, high and medium production volume industrial chemicals, pesticides (active and inert ingredients), and potential ground and drinking water contaminants.

Home | ACToR | US EPA

Wired for Books: poems, stories, plays, essays, lectures, and interviews for children and adults

Wired for Books: poems, stories, plays, essays, lectures, and interviews for children and adults 

Wired for Books: poems, stories, plays, essays, lectures, and interviews for children and adults.

Wired for Books: poems, stories, plays, essays, lectures, and interviews for children and adults

Phrasefinder

The meanings and origins of sayings and phrases | List of sayings | English sayings | Idiom definitions | Idiom examples | Idiom origins | List of idioms | Idiom dictionary | Meaning of idioms

A brief history of phrase finding...

The Phrasefinder site was founded in 1997 by Gary Martin, who writes the Meanings and Origins section of the site and the Phrase A Week posts. It grew out of an interest in computational linguistics that was developed during his post-graduate research in 1985 and later while working in an IBM-financed research project at Sheffield Hallam University. That project, headed by Prof. Asher Cashdan, investigated the use of artificial intelligence techniques to aid the teaching of writing.

The site initially hosted a searchable database of phrases and idioms. Its search algorithm also uses artificial intelligence methods to provide pertinent search results.

Note: That database, called The Phrase Thesaurus found an audience amongst professional writers like journalists and copywriters. It is now available commercially, hosted by an independent site. Details, including more information on how it works, are available at that site.

The meanings and origins of sayings and phrases | List of sayings | English sayings | Idiom definitions | Idiom examples | Idiom origins | List of idioms | Idiom dictionary | Meaning of idioms

The Education Podcast Network | A Landmark Project

The Education Podcast Network | A Landmark Project
 

The Education Podcast Network is an effort to bring together into one place, the wide range of podcast programming that may be helpful to teachers looking for content to teach with and about, and to explore issues of teaching and learning in the 21st century.

Recently Added

Last Chance For Justice- The History Of The Supreme Court

Suzhou,China--A Paradise on the Earth

Dose of Motivation

The History Faculty

Pritzker Podcast

Most of the producers of these programs are educators, who have found an avenue through which they can share their knowledge, insights, and passions for teaching and learning and for the stories that they relish and teach. The directory will grow as more people come forward with their stories and ideas, and we hope that you will start to share your ideas with the larger education community by producing your own program.

The Education Podcast Network | A Landmark Project

digitalresearchtools / FrontPage

digitalresearchtools / FrontPage 

Digital Research Tools (DiRT) This wiki collects information about tools and resources that can help scholars (particularly in the humanities and social sciences) conduct research more efficiently or creatively. Whether you need software to help you manage citations, author a multimedia work, or analyze texts, Digital Research Tools will help you find what you're looking for. We provide a directory of tools organized by research activity, as well as reviews of select tools in which we not only describe the tool's features, but also explore how it might be employed most effectively by researchers.

digitalresearchtools / FrontPage

Seeking Michigan

Seeking Michigan

Seeking Michigan is about…Michigan of course!  Our name is derived from the state motto: “Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam circumspice,”  ”If you seek a pleasant peninsula, look about you.”

Mission

To enrich quality of life by providing access to unique historical information that promotes Michigan’s cultural heritage.  We define cultural heritage as the stories of Michigan’s families, homes, businesses, communities and landscapes as told by unique source documents, maps, films, images, oral histories and artifacts.

Goal

Simple.  Seeking Michigan connects you to the stories of this great state.

Seeking Michigan

Scientific Commons | A Community for Scientific Information

Scientific Commons | A Community for Scientific Information

ScientificCommons.org aims to provide the most comprehensive and freely available access to scientific knowledge on the internet.

The major aim of the project is to develop the world’s largest communication medium for scientific knowledge products which is freely accessible to the public. A key challenge of the project is to support the rapidly growing number of movements and archives who admit the free distribution and access to scientific knowledge. These are the valuable sources for the ScientificCommons.org project. The ScientificCommons.org project makes it possible to access the largely distributed sources with their vast amount of scientific publications via just one common interface. ScientificCommons.org identifies authors from all archives and makes their social and professional relationships transparent and visible to anyone across disciplinary, institutional and technological boundaries. Currently ScientificCommons.org has indexed about 13 million scientific publications and successfully extracted 6 million authors' names out of this data (January 2007).

Scientific Commons | A Community for Scientific Information

Archival Sound Recordings

Archival Sound Recordings

Archival Sound Recordings

Archival Sound Recordings is the result of a development project to increase access to the British Library Sound Archive's extensive collections. The British Library holds one of the world’s foremost sound archives with a collection of over 3.5 million audio recordings. These come from all over the world and cover the entire range of recorded sound from music, drama and literature, to oral history, wildlife and environmental sounds. You can search and browse information about all the sounds held in the British Library at our online catalogue.

This website delivers a selection of that rich audio heritage in the form of tens of thousands of digitised recordings and their associated documentation. If you were to listen to all the recordings on this site for eight hours each day, every day, it would take you around four years to hear them all!

The digitisation project which made this website possible ran from 2004 to 2009 and was funded by the JISC (Joint Information Systems Committee) under its Digitisation Programme.

Archival Sound Recordings

::: UW Libraries Digital Collections :::

::: UW Libraries Digital Collections ::: 

This site features materials such as photographs, maps, newspapers, posters, reports and other media from the University of Washington Libraries, University of Washington Faculty and Departments, and organizations that have participated in partner projects with the UW Libraries. The collections emphasize rare and unique materials.

::: UW Libraries Digital Collections :::

Find A Grave - Millions of Cemetery Records

Find A Grave - Millions of Cemetery Records

Find A Grave is a resource for finding the final resting place of family, friends, and 'famous' individuals. With millions of names and photos, it is an invaluable tool for the genealogist and family history buff. Find A Grave memorials can contain rich content including photos, biographies and dates. Visitors can leave 'virtual flowers' on the memorials they visit, completing the online cemetery experience.

Find A Grave - Millions of Cemetery Records

Careers and Career Information - CareerOneStop

Careers and Career Information - CareerOneStop 

CareerOneStop is: Your pathway to career success. Tools to help job seekers, students, businesses, and career professionals Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor

Careers and Career Information - CareerOneStop

Food Timeline: food history & historic recipes

Food Timeline: food history & historic recipes 

Ever wonder what foods the Vikings ate when they set off to explore the new world? How Thomas Jefferson made his ice cream? What the pioneers cooked along the Oregon Trail? Who invented the potato chip...and why? Welcome to the Food Timeline! Food history presents a fascinating buffet of popular lore and contradictory facts. Some people will tell you it's impossible to express this topic in exact timeline format. They are correct. Most foods we eat are not invented; they evolve. About culinary research.

Food Timeline: food history & historic recipes

The Paley Center for Media

The Paley Center for Media

The Paley Center for Media, with locations in New York and Los Angeles, leads the discussion about the cultural, creative, and social significance of television, radio, and emerging platforms for the professional community and media-interested public.

The Paley Center for Media

http://www.archives.org/

 http://www.archives.org/

Archives.org find something interesting * Music * Government Public Records * Video Footage * Download Movies * Free Images * Newspaper Archive * Archive Photos * Online Radio Stations

http://www.archives.org/

Greatest Films - The Best Movies in Cinematic History

Greatest Films - The Best Movies in Cinematic History 

Filmsite.org is an award-winning website for classic film buffs, students, moviegoers and anyone else interested in the great movies of the last century. Detailed plot synopses, review commentary and film reference material are just some of the features available on the site. The site also contains film analysis, original content, information on the top films and most memorable movie scenes, "best of&" articles, and the most popular film quotes in all genres of film. Its many resources include a comprehensive overview of film history, a complete survey of the Academy Awards (Oscars), milestones and turning points in the industry, and background and descriptions for hundreds of classic Hollywood/American and other English-language movies from the last one hundred years. In the mid-1990s when it was first launched, Filmsite.org was one of the first websites to initiate the trend to select 100 Greatest Films in the history of cinema. Film critic and columnist Roger Ebert, author of The Great Movies (2002) and The Great Movies II (2005), has made many detailed references to Filmsite.org in his Chicago Sun-Times "Answer Man" column and in his many writings about the Great Movies. He has written that the site is "an invaluable repository of movie descriptions and dialogue" and that it is an "awesome website [that] contains detailed descriptions of 300 great American films, along with many other riches.

Greatest Films - The Best Movies in Cinematic History

A Glossary of Film Terms

A Glossary of Film Terms 

A Glossary of Film Terms written and designed for the web by Joel Schlemowitz Filmmaking is an art with a very complex, and in some ways confusing, vocabulary of terms. To communicate with labs, negative cutters and with your crew it is best to know the right term to use. The terms can often be used against someone not familiar with them. An old story goes that a P.A. was asked to bring over a half-apple and returned with a sliced-up piece of fruit. Use this glossary to keep those who would try to intimidate you with the lingo from doing so, but remember too, where you started from and do not use this glossary to become one of those intimidators. This glossary is intended to be supplemental to a film production course. It is a glossary of the nomenclature of filmmaking, not an encyclopedia of filmmaking. Many of the more complex issues have not been given a full explanation: such as the how to of any of the processes defined here. This is a list of simple definitions to help you speak film and find and understand the answers to your questions rather than be the answers themselves. Please note: The Glossary and Index can be somewhat slow to load at first, but once they are in your browsers cache they do speed up a little.

A Glossary of Film Terms

Institute of Historical Research | The national centre for history

Institute of Historical Research | The national centre for history

Founded in 1921 by A. F. Pollard, the Institute of Historical Research (IHR) is an important resource and meeting place for researchers from all over the world. Based at the University of London, the IHR offers:

Find out more in What we offer. You can also access a range of partner sites, including the websites of the IHR's three research centres:

Institute of Historical Research | The national centre for history

GetEducated.com | Rate, Rank & Compare Online Colleges & Degrees

GetEducated.com | Rate, Rank & Compare Online Colleges & Degrees

GetEducated.com is a consumer watchdog and advocacy group that rates, ranks, and verifies the cost, quality and credibility of online colleges and universities.

Our Mission: Educate ~ Advocate ~ Protect


Founded in 1989 by Vicky Phillips, a psychologist and educator, GetEducated.com—in partnership with America Online and the Electronic University Network—developed America’s very first online counseling center for adult distance learners.


Today, GetEducated.com remains the only consumer advocacy group in the United States dedicated exclusively to assisting online students in analyzing, comparing, rating, and ranking online colleges and universities.
GetEducated.com also serves to protect distance learners from the dark world of online education fraud through innovative free services, such as The Diploma Mill Police, a database that chronicles consumer alerts on more than 300 fake online colleges and university scams.


Unlike other ”online degree directories,” GetEducated.com is staffed by higher education experts who evaluate, screen, filter, and analyze each and every college and school that applies to our online education directory for a free listing.
In an effort to protect consumers, GetEducated is the only online degree directory that offers free basic listings to CHEA-accredited colleges and universities … and the only online college directory that bars advertising from fake Internet universities.

GetEducated.com | Rate, Rank & Compare Online Colleges & Degrees

US Government Printing Office - FDsys - Home

US Government Printing Office - FDsys - Home

GPO's Federal Digital System (FDsys) is an advanced digital system that will enable GPO to manage Government information from all three branches of the U.S. Government.

FDsys is available as a public beta during migration of information from GPO Access. The migration of information from GPO Access into FDsys will be complete in 2009, until this time GPO Access will contain all content.

Some of the main functions of the system include:

Publishing
The U.S. Congress and Federal agencies will be able to submit files and orders electronically to GPO for printing and publishing services, electronic distribution, and inclusion in the Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP)

Searching for information
Government information will reach a wider audience by providing authentic; published Government information to the public through an internet based system

Preserving information
The preservation function of FDsys will ensure public access to government information even as technology changes

Version control
Multiple versions of published information are common; FDsys will provide version control for government information.

US Government Printing Office - FDsys - Home

Yale Environment 360

Yale Environment 360

Yale Environment 360 is an online magazine offering opinion, analysis, reporting and debate on global environmental issues. We feature original articles by scientists, journalists, environmentalists, academics, policy makers, and business people, as well as multimedia content and a daily digest of major environmental news.


Yale Environment 360 is published by the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies and Yale University. We are funded in part by grants from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.


The opinions and views expressed in Yale Environment 360 are those of the authors and not of the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies or of Yale University.

Yale Environment 360

The Skeptic's Dictionary - Skepdic.com

The Skeptic's Dictionary - Skepdic.com 

The Skeptic's Dictionary is a website and a book. Each features definitions, arguments, and essays on topics ranging from acupuncture to zombies, and provides a lively, commonsense trove of detailed information on things supernatural, paranormal, and pseudoscientific. Dozens of topics in logic, perception, science, and philosophy are also covered to help explain the appeal and popularity of occult beliefs and to provide a guide for critical thinking.

The Skeptic's Dictionary - Skepdic.com

Welcome to the British Cartoon Archive - The British Cartoon Archive - University of Kent

Welcome to the British Cartoon Archive - The British Cartoon Archive - University of Kent

The British Cartoon Archive, previously known as the Centre for the Study of Cartoons and Caricature, was established in 1973, as a research centre and picture library, based upon a unique archive of over 140,000 pieces of cartoon artwork supported by a reference library of newspaper cuttings, books, catalogues and magazines. The Archive is widely used by researchers, authors, teachers, the media and students

Mission Statement

The British Cartoon Archive, at the University of Kent at Canterbury, exists to encourage and facilitate the study of cartoons and caricatures published in the United Kingdom. This is achieved by collecting, preserving, cataloguing, exhibiting, and distributing the work of cartoonists and caricaturists, and by encouraging and publishing studies of their art.

Welcome to the British Cartoon Archive - The British Cartoon Archive - University of Kent

Wilson Center OnDemand : Home

Wilson Center OnDemand : Home 

Wilson Center OnDemand is the home for the Wilson Center's multimedia programming. Browse or search for audio and video webcasts on national and international affairs issues and their historical context.

Wilson Center OnDemand : Home

Watch Documentaries and Animated Films Online - NFB.ca

Watch Documentaries and Animated Films Online - NFB.ca

NFB.ca is a Web site where you can watch films produced by the National Film Board of Canada (NFB). We’re still testing the site and need your feedback. Please have a look around, watch some films and tell us what you think.

Watch Documentaries and Animated Films Online - NFB.ca

Welcome to America's Career InfoNet

Welcome to America's Career InfoNet

CareerOneStop is…

CareerOneStop is a U.S. Department of Labor-sponsored Web site that offers career resources and workforce information to job seekers, students, businesses, and workforce professionals to foster talent development in a global economy. It includes:

  • America’s Career InfoNet helps individuals explore career opportunities to make informed employment and education choices. The Web site features user-friendly occupation and industry information, salary data, career videos, education resources, self-assessment tools, career exploration assistance, and other resources that support talent development in today's fast-paced global marketplace.  (www.CareerInfoNet.org)
  • America’s Service Locator connects individuals to employment and training opportunities available at local One-Stop Career Centers. The Web site provides contact information for a range of local work-related services, including unemployment benefits, career development, and educational opportunities. (www.ServiceLocator.org)

Welcome to America's Career InfoNet

Career Voyages - Good Jobs, Better Pay, Brighter Future - About Career Voyages

Career Voyages - Good Jobs, Better Pay, Brighter Future - About Career Voyages 

About Career Voyages

This web site is the result of a collaboration between the U.S. Department of Labor and the U.S. Department of Education. It is designed to provide information on in-demand occupations along with the skills and education needed to attain those jobs.

To learn more about how these industries and occupations were selected, click here.

If you want to keep abreast of the changes and future enhancements coming to Career Voyages, be sure to visit our What's New page.

Our Vision
  • to inform you of occupations experiencing growth and for which there are an increasing number of job openings;
  • to make you aware of the skills and education required for these occupations; and
  • to inform you of training and education that is available to prepare for these occupations and to help you advance in a career path toward a brighter future!
Our Audience

This web site is designed to provide value to all Americans, but especially targets four groups:

  • Students - If you're a young person who is either still in high school or who has graduated and is looking for a promising career with a bright future.
  • Career Changers - If you're facing a career change and are looking to find a better job in a growing field.
  • Parents - If you're a parent trying to help your son or daughter make good career and/or educational choices.
  • Career Advisors - If you're a career counselor or educator who assists others with identifying occupational opportunities and preparing for them.

Career Voyages - Good Jobs, Better Pay, Brighter Future - About Career Voyages

Monday, November 16, 2009

Daily Kos: State of the Nation

"Everyone needs a laugh on Monday!" HSM

Twenty-seven states have banned texting while driving. But 25 offer traffic updates via Twitter

Daily Kos: State of the Nation

Monday, November 9, 2009

TinEye Reverse Image Search

TinEye Reverse Image Search

So Cool.......HSM

What is TinEye?

TinEye is a reverse image search engine. You can submit an image to TinEye to find out where it came from, how it is being used, if modified versions of the image exist, or to find higher resolution versions. TinEye is the first image search engine on the web to use image identification technology rather than keywords, metadata or watermarks. For some real TinEye search examples, check out our Cool Searches page.

TinEye Reverse Image Search

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

New Blog - Citation Help for ISU and Beyond

http://citehelp.blogspot.com/

I have started a new Blog to keep primarily ISU faculty, staff, and students up-to-date with the latest tools related to bibliographic management applications, primarily EndNote, EndNote Web, and Zotero.  Anyone using these tools may benefit from the information shared.  I will try to tag those items that exclusivly related to Iowa State University such as upcoming workshops.

The address is http://citehelp.blogspot.com/

Thanks -- Stephen

Friday, October 30, 2009

14 Application Cheat Sheets & Posters for Popular Programs

14 Application Cheat Sheets & Posters for Popular Programs 

14 Application Cheat Sheets & Posters for Popular Programs

Sep. 14th, 2009 By Varun Kashyap

It is a known fact that if you want to commit something to memory, continuous revision is the key. You read something every time you are at your desk and within days it becomes second nature.

To be able to revise quickly and often, it helps if the information is terse and to the point highlighting only the important aspects. Something like an application cheat sheet or a poster that you can print and pin to a board or keep on your desk.

Here are some application cheat sheets for commonly used software that will hopefully make you more productive.

14 Application Cheat Sheets & Posters for Popular Programs

Nerdlets: Christianity/Culture/Computing

Nerdlets: Christianity/Culture/Computing 

Get Real Text out of your Scanned Documents

OCR is the technology used to turn an image of text into plain (editable, search-able) text. If you’re like me (i.e., a nerd) you probably have a pile of scanned journal articles and books and such meticulously sorted on your hard drive (PDFs for example). You can read them and print them, but you can’t search them or edit them. Wouldn’t it be nice if you could?

Well, there are a number of free options on the web, but they all have their problems. Google has some of the best OCR technology out there–they recently acquired CAPTCHA to make it even better–and they have apparently been rolling this out into Google Docs. The Google Docs version is not as wonderful as you might like, but it works on high-res documents. Read about how to turn your images into text here.

Update: I was not able to get this to work with PDFs, surprisingly. The web-app only accepts PNG, JPEG, or GIF images right now. That is unfortunate, and I assume will be “corrected” in the future. Has anyone tried this on an image yet?

Nerdlets: Christianity/Culture/Computing

Friday, October 23, 2009

Sorry -- Been Away !

 

Sorry -- had numerous work related issues which were so unforeseen that I had to drop everything to get done.

None related to open access -- but I am back.... So....

Thanks for understanding.....Stephen

Ujiko : Aide

Ujiko : Aide 

Expertise Points & Multiple Levels
The brand new version of UJIKO evolves with your expertise: The more you use it, the more functions it is able to offer .

Basic principle: each time you visit a new site, you are gaining one point of expertise. With every 10 points, you move to the next level. Your search engine is mutating, new buttons appear giving you access to advanced features (search video, images, news, encylopedia, advanced filters, animated skins, web archive, traffic details...)

Animated transitions between each level are displayed to show you the new tools, which you have just acquired.

1 new site visited = +1 point of expertise
10 points = +1 level

Ujiko : Aide

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Welcome to USAspending.gov

Welcome to USAspending.gov 

Welcome to USAspending.gov Where Americans Can See Where Their Money Goes Have you ever wanted to find more information on government spending? Have you ever wondered where Federal contracting dollars and grant awards go? Or perhaps you would just like to know, as a citizen, what the Government is really doing with your money.

Welcome to USAspending.gov

Refugee Health Information Network

Refugee Health Information Network 

Welcome to the Refugee Health Information Network (RHIN®), a national collaborative partnership managed by refugee health professionals whose objective is to provide quality multilingual, health information resources for those providing care to resettled refugees and asylees. more> Health Information in Multiple Languages Health Information in Multiple Languages Multilingual information for health professionals, refugees, and asylees (in print, audio, and video formats) Provider Tools Refugee Health Information for Providers Information useful for health providers working with refugee patients or clients, including assessment guidelines, cultural information, clinic tools, and recent literature citations Refugee Support Services Information about Health Services for Refugees Information for refugees about accessing health services in the United States (including links to information about immigration status and procedures, eligibility for Medicaid, Social Security, etc.)

Refugee Health Information Network

Penn World Table, Center for International Comparisons, University of Pennsylvania

Penn World Table, Center for International Comparisons, University of Pennsylvania

The Penn World Table (PWT) displays a set of national accounts economic time series covering many countries. Its expenditure entries are denominated in a common set of prices in a common currency so that real quantity comparisons can be made, both between countries and over time. It also provides information about relative prices within and between countries, as well as demographic data and capital stock estimates. Since the regionalization of the ICP beginning with the 1980 benchmark, Summers and Heston at Penn have been using ICP benchmark comparisons (see About the ICP) as a basis for estimating PPPs for non-benchmark countries and extrapolations backward and forward in time.  These are the major components of Penn World Tables or PWT.  An early version of this technique was developed with Irving Kravis (1978): Kravis,I., R. Summers and A.Heston (1978). "Real GDP Per Capita for More Than One Hundred Countries," Economic Journal , June.
The Penn World Tables are described in Robert Summers and Alan Heston "The Penn World Table (Mark 5): An Expanded Set of International Comparisons, 1950-1988", Quarterly Journal of Economics, May 1991, pp.327--368. (See Research Papers) The table itself, an annex to the article, was distributed to users on a diskette and through anonymous ftp by the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts. A revised and updated version of PWT 5, PWT 5.5, was made available in 1993. Version 5.6 was released January 1995. It was prepared by Alan Heston and Robert Summers of the University of Pennsylvania, Daniel A. Nuxoll of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute, and Bettina Aten of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (now at the Bureau of Economic Analysis), with the research assistance of Valerie Mercer, James Walsh, and Bao Truong. The current version of Penn World Tables, PWT 6, is produced by The Center for International Comparisons at the University of Pennsylvania ( see About CIC ). PWT 6 has been prepared by Aten, Heston and Summers with the assistance of Mark McMullen, Feng Zhu, Sham Shah and  Prajesh Parekh. Robert Feenstra of the University of California, Davis, has been consulting with CICUP in preparing PWT 6 and will jointly produce subsequent versions through the Center for International Data at Davis, and in association with the NBER.
The Table contains data on about 30 variables for about 167 countries over some or all the years 1950-98.  As PWT 6 is modified these will be described in What is new? What is Different?   PWT is built up through a set of sophisticated extrapolations from the successive benchmark studies, both through time and across space. The Penn World Table is a forerunner of a new kind of international data base that may be described as a Space-Time System of National Accounts.  PWT 6 is comparable to previous versions of the table. However, the methodology of these comparisons is still being developed so that future versions may move in the direction of national accounts constant price series, namely chaining or use stochastic methods of aggregation.  While chaining over time is natural, in that time is sequential, chaining across countries does not have such an obvious path, which is why work along these lines has only been preliminary.
Using PWT
Many users of PWT 5.6 may want to refer to those files and documentation so they remain on this site.  The most obvious difference between PWT 5.6 and 6 is that the base year has been moved from 1985 to 1996.  A second difference, largely cosmetic, is that some of the variables have been renamed and the order has been slightly altered.  This should be clear in the list of variables for PWT 6.  As noted the present coverage is 1950-2000.  
In addition to the description of PWT cited above, there are two other pieces of documentation.  First, the data Appendix of PWT 5.6 may be consulted.  Second, we have created a more readable Data Appendix for PWT 6, with the treatment of China provided as a separate China Appendix.  Also, the national accounts file underlying PWT 6.1 is provided as a separate file in Downloads.

Penn World Table, Center for International Comparisons, University of Pennsylvania

MarketingCharts: charts and data for marketers in web and Excel format

MarketingCharts: charts and data for marketers in web and Excel format

MarketingCharts is a Watershed Publishing publication. It is published daily in the US by its own staff, and also features editorial contributions from other writers and analysts in the Watershed Publishing network. MarketingCharts is a sister publication to MarketingVox, MediaBuyerPlanner and Retailer Daily.

Ad sales are handled by Watershed’s Justin Martin, who can be reached via email » justin@watershed-publishing.com or via phone at (406) 371-5687.

Editor Victoria Petrock can be reached via email » editorial@marketingcharts.com. Tips, press releases, suggestions, and questions about other editorial matters are welcomed and read avidly.

The company’s business office is located in Thetford Center, VT and can be reached via phone at (802) 785-4260 or email » support@MarketingCharts.com.

MarketingCharts: charts and data for marketers in web and Excel format

InvestIQ

InvestIQ 

Dow Jones Global Index Analysis -- Free site

InvestIQ

Discovering American Women's History Online

 Discovering American Women's History Online

This database provides access to digital collections of primary sources (photos, letters, diaries, artifacts, etc.) that document the history of women in the United States. These diverse collections range from Ancestral Pueblo pottery to Katrina Thomas's photographs of ethnic weddings from the late 20th century.

This database simplifies access to digital collections of primary sources (photos, letters, diaries, artifacts, etc.) that document the history of women in the United States. These diverse collections range from Abigail Franks' letters to her son from the 1730s and 1740s (Center for Jewish History) to Katrina Thomas' photographs of ethnic weddings from the late 20th century.

Search and Browse Options

Please see the Search Tips page for several examples of simple and complex searches.

Researchers can browse the database by subject (150+ entries), place (i.e., states), time period, and primary source type. By browsing through these lists of preconfigured searches, researchers not only gain a quick sense of the scope of the database, but may also discover topics (e.g., women engineers) and approaches to research (e.g., using scrapbooks as primary sources) that they had not considered. In addition, many users will be pleasantly surprised by the number of collections that document the history of women in their home state.

Thumbnail Images

Many "short records" in the database include a thumbnail of an image from the collection that the record describes. The use of thumbnails in this way provides a visual cue to the content of the collection. Full records include a thumbnail caption field.

About the Developer

Ken Middleton is a reference librarian at Middle Tennessee State University Library. He has a second master's degree, with an emphasis in American women's history, from the same university.

Credits and Acknowledgements

Numerous people have provided valuable advice, technical knowledge, and encouragement. Many thanks to Fagdeba Bakoyema, Al Camp, Mary Hoffschwelle, James Staub, Mayo Taylor, and the entire Digital Projects team at Walker Library.

Discovering American Women's History Online

Welcome - Medpedia

Welcome - Medpedia

Medpedia is just getting started. Welcome to the community.

The mission of Medpedia is to openly share and advance medical knowledge, and that includes the knowledge of patients, caregivers and those looking to stay well. By participating and giving your feedback, you are making Medpedia more useful to yourself and others. See all the ways you can get recognition for your contributions to Medpedia.

Welcome - Medpedia

THE Medical Biochemistry Page

THE Medical Biochemistry Page

Online textbook covering biochemistry in addition it includes:

Abbreviations
Glossary of Medical/Clinical Terms
Links
Clinical Lab Data: Blood Test Values
Awards

THE Medical Biochemistry Page

Wikimedia Commons

 Wikimedia Commons

Welcome to Wikimedia Commons A database of 4,970,855 freely usable media files to which anyone can contribute.

Wikimedia Commons is a media file repository making available public domain and freely-licensed educational media content (images, sound and video clips) to all. It acts as a common repository for the various projects of the Wikimedia Foundation, but you do not need to belong to one of those projects to use media hosted here. The repository is created and maintained not by paid-for artists but by volunteers. The scope of Commons is set out on the project scope pages.

Wikimedia Commons uses the same wiki-technology as Wikipedia and everyone can edit it. Unlike media files uploaded to other projects, files uploaded to Wikimedia Commons can be embedded on pages of all Wikimedia projects without the need to separately upload them there.

Launched on 7 September 2004, Wikimedia Commons hit the 1,000,000 uploaded media file milestone on 30 November 2006 and currently contains 4,970,782 files and 92,078 media collections. More background information about the Wikimedia Commons project itself can be found in the General disclaimer, at the Wikipedia page about Wikimedia Commons and its page in Meta-wiki.

Unlike traditional media repositories, Wikimedia Commons is free. Everyone is allowed to copy, use and modify any files here freely as long as the source and the authors are credited and as long as users release their copies/improvements under the same freedom to others. The Wikimedia Commons database itself and the texts in it are licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. The license conditions of each individual media file can be found on their description pages. More information on re-use can be found at Commons:Reusing content outside Wikimedia and Commons:First steps/Reuse.

Wikimedia Commons

Graduate Schools & Graduate Degrees Guide. Master Degree, MBA, PhD Degree Search - GradSchools.com

Graduate Schools & Graduate Degrees Guide. Master Degree, MBA, PhD Degree Search - GradSchools.com 

Welcome to GradSchools.com, the leading and most comprehensive online graduate school guide to find the best graduate schools and graduate degree programs. Search from over 60,000 master degree, doctorate / doctoral degree, PhD degree and graduate certificate programs. Search by field of study, subject, graduate school or metro area nationwide and international. For students interested in distance learning graduate study, you can also search online graduate degrees offered by accredited online colleges and universities. Explore our MBA degree programs for a finance MBA degree, international business MBA degree, leadership MBA degree and other business school MBA programs. Search top graduate schools and programs for Law school, Medical school, Business School and other disciplines including psychology, nursing, education, physical therapy, information technology, engineering and more. Create your own MyGradSchools account to save important graduate education college and university deadlines, grad school calendar events and graduate degree program information. Register for a My GradSchools Account today.

Graduate Schools & Graduate Degrees Guide. Master Degree, MBA, PhD Degree Search - GradSchools.com

Academic Earth - Video lectures from the world's top scholars

Academic Earth - Video lectures from the world's top scholars

Academic Earth is an organization founded with the goal of giving everyone on earth access to a world-class education.

As more and more high quality educational content becomes available online for free, we ask ourselves, what are the real barriers to achieving a world class education?  At Academic Earth, we are working to identify these barriers and find innovative ways to use technology to increase the ease of learning.

We are building a user-friendly educational ecosystem that will give internet users around the world the ability to easily find, interact with, and learn from full video courses and lectures from the world’s leading scholars.  Our goal is to bring the best content together in one place and create an environment in which that content is remarkably easy to use and where user contributions make existing content increasingly valuable.

We invite those who share our passion to explore our website, participate in our online community, and help us continue to find new ways to make learning easier for everyone.

Academic Earth - Video lectures from the world's top scholars

MAPLight.org

MAPLight.org

Money and Politics & hopefully transparency....Check out the Video Tour!

MAPLight.org

Monday, July 20, 2009

Th:Jefferson Encyclopedia

Th:Jefferson Encyclopedia 

Thomas Jefferson and his world by Monticello researchers and respected Jefferson scholars.

Only Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia community scholars can write and edit articles; however, public users are encouraged to submit comments on the discussion pages. For more information, see Help.

Th:Jefferson Encyclopedia

Librarian Resources | LLRX.com

 Librarian Resources | LLRX.com

Librarian Resources

Subcategories of Librarian Resources

Librarian Resources | LLRX.com

Home - SciTopics

Home - SciTopics

About SciTopics

SciTopics is a free expert-generated knowledge-sharing service for the scientific community. It serves as an information and collaboration service for researchers.

SciTopics offers authors a dynamic, quick, informal yet authoritative online publication platform

Home - SciTopics

The Great Issues Forum | Great Issues Forum

The Great Issues Forum | Great Issues Forum

The Great Issues Forum is a new initiative at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and presented by the Center for the Humanities. Funding for the initiative was provided by the 2007 Carnegie Corporation of New York's Academic Leadership Award, presented to Chancellor Matthew Goldstein. Each year, the Forum will explore critical issues of our time through a single thematic lens. Our inaugural theme is Power. In a series of high-profile, free public Conversations featuring artists, intellectuals, and policy makers, the Great Issues Forum is examining the ways in which various categories of power – political, economic, cultural, military, and educational – work in our increasingly globalized world. Subsequent themes for 2009-2011 will be "Faith" and "Place."
The Forum also hosts an online seminar with prominent guest bloggers, distinguished faculty, and select graduate students who will discuss a series of texts related to the annual theme.
The Great Issues Forum is designed to replicate the mission of The Graduate Center of the City University of New York – to educate the children of all people, to pursue enlightenment, and to disseminate knowledge for the benefit of all society. By turning the spotlight for a year on an in-depth examination of an issue of great cultural and political consequence, the Great Issues Forum hopes to stimulate new scholarly lines of inquiry, inform students and the public at large, and encourage civic engagement in their local communities and around the world.

The Great Issues Forum | Great Issues Forum

About Us - The AboutJobs.com Network

About Us - The AboutJobs.com Network 

The AboutJobs.com Network

Founded in 1996, AboutJobs.com is an on-line recruitment network that provides career resources and employment opportunities to high school and college students, resort and hospitality staff, expatriates and international job seekers, part-time workers, and adventure seekers.

AboutJobs.com offers services to employers looking to use the power of the Internet to find candidates for hard to fill positions across North America and the world. AboutJobs.com provides employers access to hundreds of thousands of candidates each month who are looking for internships, summer jobs, resort and hospitality employment and overseas work. AboutJobs.com has also created the GeoJobs™ e-recruiting application that allows employers to simultaneously post job openings on their internal corporate Web sites and the AboutJobs.com network of sites.

About Us - The AboutJobs.com Network

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Yet Another Plan To Change Copyright Law To Protect Newspapers | Techdirt

Yet Another Plan To Change Copyright Law To Protect Newspapers | Techdirt 

Yet Another Plan To Change Copyright Law To Protect Newspapers

from the please,-someone,-think-this-through dept

Last week, we wrote about Judge Posner's troubling idea that copyright law should be changed to protect newspapers, and this week, a columnist for the Cleveland Plain Dealer is backing the same basic idea as proposed by two brothers, David and Daniel Marburger. One is a First Amendment lawyer and the other an economist -- and I'm stunned that both would get things so backwards. Their specific proposal is that:

  • Aggregators would reimburse newspapers for ad revenues associated with their news reports.
  • Injunctions would bar aggregators' profiting from newspapers' content for the first 24 hours after stories are posted.
Both are incredibly shortsighted and backwards and would do significantly more harm than good. Both are based on a fundamental misunderstanding of how news and the internet works. Even more amusing? They try to "anticipate the rebuttal" and get that totally wrong, claiming that people will complain: "Newspapers want to monopolize the truth."
No. That's not the complaint at all. The problem is much more basic than that. It's that newspapers (and the Marburgers, apparently) are confused about how people communicate and what business they're in. They think -- incorrectly -- that newspapers are in the business of delivering the news. But that's just a small part of it. They're really in the business of building a community of folks, who they then sell to advertisers. As such, they need to be doing two things, both of which this plan makes harder:
  • They need to provide more value to their community, so they stick around
  • They need to attract more people to their community
Now go back and look at the Marburgers' plan, and realize how backwards it is. It takes away value from the community by making it harder for those in the community to share and spread the news themselves -- a vital part of how people interact with the news these days. And just how do you define an "aggregator"? If someone Twitters a link to a news story... does Twitter become an aggregator? On top of that, barring others from "profiting" off the news for 24 hours simply limits the ability of others to help newspapers get more traffic.
Of course, in the meantime, Jay Rosen points us to Josh Young's analysis of what would almost certainly happen if newspapers could block others from linking to them. It's essentially what we've suggested in the past: if you give short-sighted and clueless newspapers the tools to block others from sending them traffic, that just opens wide the market for their smarter competitors to gladly accept all that traffic. Hell, it appears that Reuters recognizes the future. The folks there must be salivating over the idea that others would lock up their content and leave the playing field wide open to Reuters to scoop up all that traffic.

Yet Another Plan To Change Copyright Law To Protect Newspapers | Techdirt

OASIS

OASIS 

OASIS aims to provide an authoritative ‘sourcebook’ on Open Access, covering the concept, principles, advantages, approaches and means to achieving it. The site highlights developments and initiatives from around the world, with links to diverse additional resources and case studies. As such, it is a community-building as much as a resource-building exercise. Users are encouraged to share and download the resources provided, and to modify and customize them for local use. Open Access is evolving, and we invite the growing world-wide community to take part in this exciting global movement

OASIS

Friday, June 12, 2009

Pubget: the search engine for life-science PDFs

Pubget: the search engine for life-science PDFs

Pubget solves the problem of full-text document access in life science research. Instead of search results linking to papers, with Pubget's proprietary technology, the search results ARE the papers. Once you find the papers you want, you can save, manage and share them — all online.

Each year, scientists spend at least a quarter billion minutes searching for biomedical literature online. This is time they could better spend curing disease and building the future. Pubget's mission is to give them (you!) that time back.

Pubget: the search engine for life-science PDFs

Don't Sign Contracts with Confidentiality Clauses, says ARL - 6/11/2009 - Library Journal

 Don't Sign Contracts with Confidentiality Clauses, says ARL - 6/11/2009 - Library Journal

Don't Sign Contracts with Confidentiality Clauses, says ARL

Nondisclosure has "negative impact on effective negotiations"

Josh Hadro -- Library Journal, 6/11/2009

ARL urges members not to agree to restrictive contracts

  • Will open negotiations work?
  • Mechanism planned for collecting licensing and contract terms

Aiming to increase libraries' leverage in pricing and licensing negotiations, the board of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) urges member libraries to refrain from entering into vendor contracts that require nondisclosure or confidentiality clauses.

The hope is that more openness among libraries about analogous agreements at similar institutions will force vendors to offer more equitable deals all around.

Georgia Harper, scholarly communications advisor for the University of Texas at Austin, agreed, telling LJAN, "the more libraries one is able to talk to about what one is hearing from a vendor, the better to make decisions about the benefit versus the cost."

May not be enough
Harper also indicated, however, that this effort toward openness may not be enough on its own to revise the pricing standard downward over the long term. 
"[I]f the ARL goal were achieved, I feel certain the vendors would find other ways to maintain their margins," she said. "Like all successful players in a market economy, they have many strategies to build and sustain their income streams. If one source of revenue dries up or diminishes despite their efforts to keep it steady or increase it, they will create a new one or enhance an old one."

Sharing contract terms
Given that publicly funded institutions are more bound than private ones by disclosure requirements, it seems that the ARL statement is aimed primarily at the latter. But the statement also goes further with recommendations that apply equally to all kinds of institutions.

ARL libraries are urged at the outset to "share upon request from other libraries information contained in these agreements." 
The last line of the statement hints at something further, describing a proposed "mechanism by which [ARL] members can share information with one another about their agreements," to be established by ARL. 
Though no further details were available, this could mark the beginnings of an opt-in resource for collecting licensing terms, potentially saving librarians the significant effort of making requests of licensing terms from peer institutions.

Don't Sign Contracts with Confidentiality Clauses, says ARL - 6/11/2009 - Library Journal

Monday, June 8, 2009

Legal Threats Database | Citizen Media Law Project

Legal Threats Database | Citizen Media Law Project 

Legal Threats Database

Welcome to the CMLP's database of legal threats! The database contains lawsuits, cease & desist letters, subpoenas, and other legal threats directed at those who engage in online speech. You can view, search, and comment on every entry in the database. Interested in lawsuits against bloggers? You'll find them on the Lawsuits Involving Blogs page. How about threats involving forum posts and user comments? You'll find those here. You can use our advanced search page to sort the entries by any criterion of your choosing, as well as perform full-text searching of the underlying documents.

We need your help to keep the database accurate and up to date. If you've been threatened with legal action or know of someone who has, please let us know by using our contact form or by entering the information directly into the database through our easy to use threat entry form. If you have questions, check out our database FAQ.

Legal Threats Database | Citizen Media Law Project

BioEd Online: Biology Teacher Resources

BioEd Online: Biology Teacher Resources

Welcome to BioEd Online, the online educational resource for educators, students, and parents. BioEd Online utilizes state-of-the-art technology to give you instant access to reliable, cutting-edge information and educational tools for biology and related subjects. Our goal is to provide useful, accurate, and current information and materials that build upon and enhance the skills and knowledge of science educators. Developed under the guidance of our expert Editorial Board, BioEd Online offers the following high-quality resources.

  • Streaming Video Presentations - View timely presentations given by thought leaders on education in biology and related subjects, classroom management, science standards, and other issues in education. Presentation topics include content reviews for prospective biology teachers, content updates for experienced teachers, research lab technique demonstrations, inquiry science, and assessment. In addition, BioEd Online offers helpful presentations for teachers in training as they prepare for the classroom experience.
  • Slide Library - Customize exciting and relevant lesson plans and activities from hundreds of searchable slides developed by our Editorial Board and contributors. The slide library is updated regularly. Each slide is complete with talking points and references and can be downloaded into your own PowerPoint program for personal educational use.
    as they prepare for the classroom experience.
  • Editors' News Picks - Stay current with science news selected by our Editorial Board. Check back each week for new science stories and related discussion questions to complement your ongoing science activities, and to stimulate an exchange of ideas in your classroom. All Editors' Picks are maintained in our archive for easy access whenever you need them.

BioEd Online is regularly updated with pertinent new slides in the slide library, presentations on breakthrough research, reviews, and virtual workshops on educational approaches and materials. Stay current with the latest research from top educators in the country by bookmarking BioEd Online for later use!

Would you like to be notified regarding updates to BioEd Online? Please complete the BioEd Online registration form.

BioEd Online: Biology Teacher Resources

UNdata

 UNdata

UNdata - a data access system to UN databases
The United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD) of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) has launched a new internet-based data service for the global user community. It brings UN statistical databases within easy reach of users through a single entry point (http://data.un.org/) from which users can now search and download a variety of statistical resources of the UN System.
On the occasion of the launch of this service, DESA Under-Secretary-General Sha Zukang stated:

"The UN System has accumulated over the past 60 years an impressive amount of information. UNdata, developed by the Statistics Division of DESA, is a new powerful tool, which will bring this unique and authoritative set of data not only to the desks of decision-makers and analysts, but also to journalists, to students and to all citizens of the world."
Since its foundation, the United Nations System has been collecting statistical information from Member States on a variety of topics. The information thus collected constitutes a considerable information asset of the organization. However, since these statistical data are often stored in proprietary databases - each with unique dissemination and access policies - as a result, users are often unaware of the full array of statistical information that the UN System has in its data libraries. The current arrangement also means that users are required to move from one database to another to access different types of information. UNdata addresses this problem by pooling major UN databases and those of several international organizations into a single internet environment. The innovative design allows users to access a large number of UN databases either by browsing the data series or through a keyword search.
Useful features like Country Profiles, Advanced Search and Glossaries are also provided to aid research. The numerous databases, tables and glossaries containing over 55 million data points cover a wide range of themes including Agriculture, Education, Employment, Energy, Environment, Health, HIV/AIDS, Human Development, Industry, Information and Communication Technology, National Accounts, Population, Refugees, Tourism, Trade, as well as the Millennium Development Goals indicators. Whilst this initial version of UNdata is fully equipped with all the functionalities for data access, the development team is continuously adding new databases and features to further enhance the usefulness to users. When fully developed, UNdata will have a comprehensive array of international and national databases providing the world instant access to a wealth of statistical information.
UNdata is the brainchild of UNSD, the statistical arm of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs and the coordinator of statistical activities throughout the UN System. UNSD's core mission is to advance the development of the global statistical system and promote the dissemination of statistical information. This database service is part of a project launched by UNSD in 2005, called "Statistics as a Public Good", whose objectives are to provide free access to global statistics, to educate users about the importance of statistics for evidence-based policy and decision-making and to assist National Statistical Offices of Member Countries to strengthen their data dissemination capabilities. The project is implemented in partnership with Statistics Sweden and the Gapminder Foundation with partial financial support from the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA).

 

UNdata

ResearchChannel

ResearchChannel

ResearchChannel was founded by a consortium of leading research and academic institutions to share the valuable work of their researchers with the public. ResearchChannel is now available to nearly 38 million satellite and cable television subscribers and our Web site is visited by 2 million visitors each year. The channel is also available on more than 80 university-and school-based cable systems in the United States and in other countries.

Remarkable speakers, researchers and scholars present revolutionary thoughts and discoveries on ResearchChannel. The University of Michigan, the George Mason University and the National Science Foundation are just a few of the world-renowned institutions that participate and whose programs are featured.

These distinguished research universities and institutes also actively participate in testing and developing next- generation technologies to distribute video and interactive media content worldwide. ResearchChannel uses advanced streaming and broadband technologies and is working with partners from around the world to test new methods of global video distribution and interaction. New technologies are essential for enhancing collaboration, reaching a wider audience and providing alternative, high-speed exchanges of video resources.

Programs on ResearchChannel appeal to a wide variety of general and niche audiences.  Many medical and technology professionals regard ResearchChannel as a critical source of new information in their fields. Other viewers are excited by the opportunity to delve deeply into topics that have captured their interest. Online visitors from 210 countries around the world tell us that their lives are enriched by direct access to content from the best and brightest thought-leaders from our world-renowned member institutions. 

Viewers access programs online via a live webstream and an extensive video-on-demand library. The library houses more than 3,500 full-length programs that are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
ResearchChannel is headquartered at the University of Washington in Seattle, WA.

To learn more about ResearchChannel, explore this site or call us at 1-877-616-7265.

Note: From time to time the ResearchChannel makes awards, grants and enters into contracts.   In so doing, The ResearchChannel policy on awards, grants and contracts is that it will not pay any form of institutional overhead or indirect cost.

 

 

ResearchChannel

Friday, June 5, 2009

FireShot: Free Image Editor To Capture and Edit Screenshots

FireShot: Free Image Editor To Capture and Edit Screenshots 

FireShot: Free Image Editor To Capture and Edit Screenshots

Most of you capture screenshots from webpages, then paste and edit them in Paint as it comes along with your Windows package. With a limited number of editing tools on Paint, you can hardly emphasize your image. There are other image editors with powerful tools like Photoshop or Snagit. But you won't probably go for such expensive software, if you get a free image editor with efficient editing tools. FireShot is one such a freebie, that offers you the some of the best tools for capturing and editing screenshots from web pages.

FireShot is a Firefox and IE extension that is easy to install. Once installed its icon appears on the top left of your Firefox or IE browser. FireShot offers a set of editing and annotation tools not provided in most image editing software. It allows you to quickly modify captured web pages, insert text and graphical annotations.

fireshot
With FireShot you can capture the entire web page or a part of it. After this you can edit, upload to free public screenshot hosting, save it to your local disk in any format between PNG, GIF, JPEG, BMP. Further, you can print that image, copy it to clipboard or even send it as email attachment. You can also open it on an external editor.

The free image editor offers few annotation tools with the help of which you can edit the image easily like adding annotation, text, pointer,  image and drawing.

In case, you wanna capture a small area of screenshot highlight the portion and crop the image with the crop tool.

FireShot Download for Firefox
FireShot Download for Internet Explorer

Enjoy the free software and drop in your responses.

FireShot: Free Image Editor To Capture and Edit Screenshots

Wired Campus: Judge Dismisses Software-Licensing Case Against George Mason U. - Chronicle.com

Wired Campus: Judge Dismisses Software-Licensing Case Against George Mason U. - Chronicle.com 

Judge Dismisses Software-Licensing Case Against George Mason U.

A Virginia Circuit Court judge dismissed a lawsuit this morning against George Mason University’s Center for History and New Media.

Thomson Reuters Inc. had sued the university in a Virginia court in September for at least $10-million in damages, claiming that Zotero, a free software tool created by the university, made improper use of the company’s EndNote citation software.

Zotero is a plug-in for the Firefox Web browser that is designed to help scholars store and organize their online research. The program, which could convert EndNote files, had been downloaded over one million times by September.

George Mason University said in November it had not renewed a site license for EndNote, and would not make any changes to its software.

A spokesman for the university confirmed the case had been dismissed but declined to comment further. Officials at Thomson Reuters were not immediately available for comment on the dismissal. — Marc Beja

Wired Campus: Judge Dismisses Software-Licensing Case Against George Mason U. - Chronicle.com

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Investigations of a Dog » EThOS

Investigations of a Dog » EThOS 

EThOS

[posted by Gavin Robinson, 3:22 pm, 9 March 2009]

As I mentioned last week, EThOS is now open to the public. This is the British Library’s new online service for delivering copies of UK PhD theses, replacing the old British Thesis Service which used to supply copies on paper or microfilm. Although the site is officially in beta most features seem to be fully working. Right now there’s only a basic search (you can’t limit your search to specific fields) but it accepts wildcards and should be enough to find what you want if you know what you’re looking for. Searches can be limited to theses which are available for immediate download.

Theses are being digitized on demand. If someone has already requested and received a copy of a thesis then it will be available immediately for anyone else who wants it. There is no charge for downloading a thesis which has already been digitized, but you have to pay the cost of printing and binding if you prefer a hard copy. The publicity last year suggested that the first person to request a thesis would have to pay the costs of digitization, but now it looks like this will rarely happen because many university libraries have agreed to pay for digitization of their own theses as part of their commitment to open access. Once a new thesis has been requested digitization is promised in 10 working days although a notice on the site says there might be delays because of heavy demand. I ordered an undigitized thesis today (D. E. Lewis on the parliamentarian ordnance office - something I would have read during my PhD if I’d known about it), so we’ll see how long it takes.

Searching for “english civil war” limited to theses already available I got a couple of hits (there are lots more for “first world war”) and downloaded David Evans’s thesis on Edward Massey. I found it slightly annoying that I had to go through a checkout process even though the download was free, but it’s still an awful lot more convenient than paying around £50 and waiting several weeks the last time I ordered a thesis. The digital file is a PDF but it comes inside a zip file. That seemed slightly pointless as it didn’t make the download significantly smaller (12MB zipped, 14MB unzipped) and means that you can’t view the thesis straight away in your browser. It might make sense if multiple orders were combined in the same zip file, but even if you have more than one thesis in your basket you still have to download and unzip each one separately.

It looks like most UK universities are participating in the scheme, but significantly Oxford and Cambridge aren’t. Although their theses show up in the search results they can’t be ordered through the site. This might just result in fewer people bothering to read and cite theses from the big two, so it could be their loss as much as anyone else’s.

Overall I’m really impressed with this site. There are some minor things that could be improved, and it crashes occasionally, but it’s obviously going to be a very useful resource. I’m particularly pleased that in most cases users won’t have to pay for theses. I hope this will encourage people to be more adventurous about which theses they consult.

Investigations of a Dog » EThOS

Thursday, May 14, 2009

UpToDate Inc.

UpToDate Inc. 

UpToDate is an evidence based, peer reviewed information resource - available via the Web, desktop computer, and PDA.

With UpToDate, you can answer questions quickly, increase your clinical knowledge, and improve patient care. Independent studies confirm these benefits.

The UpToDate community includes our faculty of more than 4,000 leading physicians, peer reviewers, and editors and over 360,000 users. Our faculty writes topic reviews that include a synthesis of the literature, the latest evidence, and specific recommendations for patient care. Our users provide feedback to the editorial group. This community's combined efforts result in the most trusted, unbiased medical information available.

 

UpToDate Inc.

ScienceBlogs

ScienceBlogs

scienceblogs.com

Science is driving our conversation unlike ever before.

From climate change to intelligent design, HIV/AIDS to stem cells, science education to space exploration, science is figuring prominently in our discussions of politics, religion, philosophy, business and the arts. New insights and discoveries in neuroscience, theoretical physics and genetics are revolutionizing our understanding of who are are, where we come from and where we're heading. Launched in January 2006, ScienceBlogs is a portal to this global dialogue, a digital science salon featuring the leading bloggers from a wide array of scientific disciplines. Today, ScienceBlogs is the largest online community dedicated to science.

We believe in providing our bloggers with the freedom to exercise their own editorial and creative instincts. We do not edit their work and we do not tell them what to write about.

We have selected our 60+ bloggers based on their originality, insight, talent, and dedication and how we think they would contribute to the discussion at ScienceBlogs. Our role, as we see it, is to create and continue to improve this forum for discussion, and to ensure that the rich dialogue that takes place at ScienceBlogs resonates outside the blogosphere.

ScienceBlogs is very much an experiment in science communication, and being first also means being first to encounter unforeseen obstacles. We are learning as we go (and as goes the blogosphere) and appreciate your understanding and patience.

ScienceBlogs was created by Seed Media Group. We believe that science literacy is a pre-condition for progress in the 21st century. At a time when public interest in science is high but public understanding of science remains weak, we have set out to create innovative media ventures to improve science literacy and to advance global science culture. To learn more about what we do and why we do it, please visit seedmediagroup.com.

ScienceBlogs