Showing posts with label to do. Show all posts
Showing posts with label to do. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Big Cartoon Blog- Cartoons News and Animated Film Information

 

Big Cartoon Blog- Cartoons News and Animated Film Information

The Big Car­toon Data­Base Blog Site.
This project started because we were bored. And, we wanted an easy way to look up infor­ma­tion about car­toons, a ded­i­cated car­toon fil­mog­ra­phy and in depth episode guide. While IMdb is very good for movies, and has some car­toon infor­ma­tion, it did not seem to us to be enough. So, we decided to make some­thing that did suit our needs, The Big Car­toon Data­Base (and lots of long nights) ensued.
First and fore­most, this is a labor of love. No one gets paid a dime for doing this fil­mog­ra­phy— in fact, we loose money monthly just run­ning the darn thing. But it is some­thing we enjoy, and so we will keep doing it, updat­ing and adding every chance we get. While the project started as a cou­ple of guys in Salt Lake City with too much time on their hands, we are very indebted to those oth­ers– who, like us, love car­toons– and have given freely of their time, hard work and research to help make The Big Car­toon Data­Base what it is today.

Cartoon Images

BCDB started as an Access data­base on my work com­puter. I had a list of all the Dis­ney fea­ture car­toons (peo­ple often ask me what the “offi­cial” list is, so I kept my own copy). Then I found a fil­mog­ra­phy of about 5000 car­toons that Nobuo Mochizuki main­tains at Shizuoka Uni­ver­sity Library in Japan. Nobuo was very kind and sent us his source, and we had enough info to get started. Since then, infor­ma­tion, car­toon his­tory and episode guides has come from all over the world– Aus­tralia, United King­dom, France, Japan— even Rus­sia. Sup­port has come from fans and pro­fes­sion­als alike, and we could not be more grate­fully for all the sup­port.
We have done our best to val­i­date the infor­ma­tion in the fil­mog­ra­phy. But some­times that can be hard to do, espe­cially for older car­toons. Please con­sider any errors in the data­base ours. How­ever, if you notice errors, it is pos­si­ble to send an error report for an indi­vid­ual car­toon right from its page. We want to do our best to make this the most infor­ma­tive, cor­rect resource possible!
But infor­ma­tion by itself is not use­ful if you can­not present it in an easy to use (and easy to main­tain) fash­ion. We needed scal­a­bil­ity, speed, secu­rity, speed, con­fig­ura­bil­ity and speed. We found all this (and more!) at Gos­samer Threads with Links SQL. While built as a “Links” data­base, àla Yahoo, it pro­vided the basis for what we turned into BCDB. And the sup­port has been tremen­dous– Alex is always avail­able to help in emer­gen­cies. And the online sup­port groups– most notably Pug­dog and Paul– have really helped us craft the episode guide and filmography.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Rosalind Wiseman: What Makes a Good Bullying PSA?

I blogged this because – I think there are words of advice for anyone who is trying to get a message to kids/or adults for that matter that not in their peer group…No matter what the issue…

A bad bullying prevention program or PSA:

1. Relies on gimmicks, like anti-bullying T-shirts, useless slogans like, "Bullying isn't cool. Don't do it," bracelets, pledges, and celebrity appearances as the principle educational strategy.
2. Depicts stereotyped situations.
3. Shows all white people at the center of the plot, or has token racial diversity. For example, the Queen Bee white girl with her backup Black and Asian friends.
4. Presents suicide as a natural consequence of being bullied and as a revenge fantasy against the bullies. Kids don't have to have suicide thrown in their face to take bullying seriously. Emphasizing suicide will make children think that any feelings less than that aren't worth reporting.
5. Portrays no realistic and comforting adult presence.
6. Provides no skills or strategies to stop bullying beyond, "Tell an adult" and doesn't acknowledge that telling an adult often doesn't help at all.
7. Assumes that bullying is always one-way.
8. Gives the primary motivations to not bully as that you will be punished or feel guilty.
9. Emphasizes blame.
10. Ignores the fact that most bullies think they're defending themselves or are at least justified; e.g. the victim deserves it. This is one of the primary reasons why a bully won't see themselves in these types of campaigns.

 

A Good Bullying Prevention PSA and Campaign:

1. Depicts realistic scenarios, knowing that if presented realistically the topic will hold the viewer's attention. (T-shirts, bracelets and celebrities are unnecessary.)
2. Incorporates the power, negative or positive, of the by-stander.
3. Clarifies, age appropriately, the difference between snitching and reporting.
4. Reflects young people's understanding and experience of race dynamics. i.e. while racism can be a weapon to bully, children have a nuanced perspective on race.
5. Understands how homophobia is tied to bullying.
6. Has an adult (maybe a parent) comforting a child.
7. Doesn't patronize the viewer.
8. Provides skills and inspiration in equal proportion to depicting the problem.
9. Is willing to acknowledge that adults can be part of the problem as well as help solve or improve the situation.
10. Inspires people to take the risk to publicly support victims and responsibly confront bullies.

 

 

 

Rosalind Wiseman: What Makes a Good Bullying PSA?

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Fastweb : Scholarships, Financial Aid, Student Loans and Colleges

 

Fastweb : Scholarships, Financial Aid, Student Loans and Colleges

Fastweb is the premier online resource for paying and preparing for college.

For fifteen years, we have excelled in providing students with the resources to realize their educational pursuits, from the time they begin their college search in high school to the day they land their first job after graduation.

Fastweb members are matched to relevant scholarship opportunities completely free of charge. With roughly 1.5 million scholarships worth over $3.4 billion, there are scholarships for every student’s educational goals, activities and interests. Additionally, Fastweb members can depend on us for insider financial aid tips and job and internship matches in their area.

Our success stems from our commitment to empower students lives through information and innovation, creating an environment in which the scholarship and financial aid industry is better defined and more attainable.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Citebase

“HSM Not sure what this does yet – but wanted not to loose it….”

 

Welcome to Citebase Search

Citebase Search is a semi-autonomous citation index for the free, online research literature. It harvests pre- and post- prints (most author self-archived) from OAI-PMH compliant archives, parses and links their references and indexes the metadata in a search engine.

Citebase contains articles from physics, maths, information science, and (published only) biomedical papers.

http://www.citebase.org/help/#impactwarning

Friday, January 15, 2010

How to Become an Internet Research Expert: Find Anything Online | WebMasters Software

How to Become an Internet Research Expert: Find Anything Online | WebMasters Software 

Look for Tutorials

Depending on your topic, you may be able to find tutorials. For pretty much any practical skill (and a whole lot of unpractical ones), you can find an online tutorial that teaches you how to do it.

You can find tutorials through search engines (just add “tutorial” or “instructions” to the end of your keyword search). You can also find them on these websites:

Instructables is a general tutorial website that offers step-by-step instructions on projects in categories such as arts, crafts, food, kids, music, outdoors and pets. Every tutorial has photos and/or diagrams to illustrate the process.

eHow offers categorized instructions and tutorials created by users. They include both text and video tutorials on a variety of topics, including law, health, food and drink, electronics and computers.

WikiHow is a user-editable how-to manual that covers a ton of different topics. Because of its wiki format, tutorials and instructions are constantly being improved.

The Tuts+ Network offers tutorials on a variety of tech topics, including Photoshop, web design, Flash and photography. Its tutorials are split into separate blogs based on topic and are written by experts.

Tutorialized offers tech tutorials for a variety of software programs, including Photoshop, GIMP, Flash, Blender and Illustrator.

Good-Tutorials offers up tech-related tutorials, covering CSS, Flash, HTML, Photoshop, PHP and more. Tutorials are categorized and searchable.

How to Become an Internet Research Expert: Find Anything Online | WebMasters Software

Odeo: Search, Discover and Share Digital Media from Millions of Audio and Video Clips

Odeo: Search, Discover and Share Digital Media from Millions of Audio and Video Clips

Home to millions of audio & video episodes from thousands of podcasts and media sites across the web, Odeo.com is part search engine, part media directory, and part social network. Users can search & explore media channels covering just about any topic or area of interest – from automotive to technology, comedy to cooking, education to entertainment. With Odeo, it’s easy to subscribe to channels and be alerted when new episodes are published, save favorites & create playlists to share with friends.

Odeo: Search, Discover and Share Digital Media from Millions of Audio and Video Clips

Friday, October 30, 2009

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

Monday, February 23, 2009

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect 

Be the First to Know

Web Page Monitoring Services

for tracking pages without RSS feeds...

ChangeDetect is a FREE service that saves your favorite web pages, monitors content for changes and sends an automatic email notification to you whenever your web pages are updated.  Sign up now.

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect

Friday, February 20, 2009

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

More things to look at.....HSM

Library a’ la Cartehttp://alacarte.library.oregonstate.edu/ a content management system designed for creating and maintaining library research guides
Drupal - http://drupal.org/ a content management system
Moodlehttp://moodle.org/ a course management system used by many colleges and universities

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Incompetech

Incompetech

Used this today to put royalty free music in a tutorial on citation searching... might screencast later but didn't want to loose the site....HSM

Music

Royalty-Free Music Music FAQ Music Licenses Scoring Services

PDFs

Graph/Grid Paper Mailing Labels Monthly Calendars Yearly Calendars

Literature/Arts

British Authors Name Database Theater Scripts The Movie Critic Guide to Art

Other

Gallimaufry Send Email! Donate

Incompetech

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Tech Tip ~ Note Taking | Liberty Hall Writers

 Tech Tip ~ Note Taking | Liberty Hall Writers

Tech Tip ~ Note Taking

Published by Mike Munsil on January 31st, 2009 in How-To, Reading.

Take Note, Writers!

Everyone has their own way of doing it. Some like it hot; some not. Some do it on paper, others do it on the internet. However you do it, it’s all good.

KISS ~ Let’s keep it simple:

I am NOT going to recommend using MS Word for note taking. That’s just ridiculous. Notepad is better, far better, and that’s ’cause Notepad strips out the non-essentials and just gets down to basics.

So, what ARE the basics of note-taking? Well, to me the basics are NOT trying to copy everything verbatim; nor is it trying to reword and rewrite the source material. To me, note taking is capturing JUST ENOUGH of the essentials to meet your needs, and making sure you refer others to the source of the information you use.

So, here it is, in a nutshell:

    ~ Firstly, define what your needs are; it won’t take long and it really pays off.
    ~ Once you know what you need, the hard part is done. Capture that info and if doing so with pen and paper is what works for you, just do it. No need to get fancy if you don’t want to.

MEMEME ~ If you’re like me:

Nah!
That’s too easy. I’m going to use free, reliable and easy to use software to do it, instead. There’s plenty of it out there and here are some links to a few of them:

KeyNote, TreePad Lite and MemPad are notable for their simple file-tree organization system and the
ability to maintain many notes within a single file.

KeyNote
TreePad Lite
MemPad

ENoteFile is very flexible and allows you to attach images as well as taking notes ~ EnoteFile

Tiddlywiki
is an amazingly extensible single-file program that can be read and used in any internet browser on Macs, Windows PCs and Linux boxes. The generic form of Tiddlywiki in particular is very well supported. The TiddlyBackpack version is specifically aimed at note taking.

GEARHEADS ~ Coffee and the Internet… a potent combination:

No, no, no! That’s too easy and none of it even includes the internet! What ARE you thinking?

Okay, if you’re REALLY like me, you can make it more complicated and do it on the internet, as an application that accesses the internet, using an application that resides in your browser, or implementing Web 2.0 technology by putting your very own Wiki up on the web.

EverNote allows you to easily capture information in any environment using
whatever device or platform you find most convenient, and makes this information accessible and searchable at any time, from anywhere.

Zotero [zoh-TAIR-oh] is a free, easy-to-use Firefox extension to help you collect, manage, and cite your research sources. It lives right where you do your work - in the web browser itself.

Dokuwiki is a standards-compliant, simple to use Wiki, mainly aimed at creating documentation of any kind. It is targeted at developer teams, workgroups and small companies. It has a simple but powerful syntax which makes sure the datafiles remain readable outside the Wiki and eases the creation of structured texts. All data is stored in plain text files – no database is required. Installing it is as simple as copying all the files via FTP to your web site, and executing ‘install.php’.

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2 Responses to “Tech Tip ~ Note Taking”
  1.  Jake says:

    February 2, 2009 at 10:59 am

    I’d like to recommend a note taking software called NoteScribe. It’s great for creating, storing, and organizing notes on your computer, as well as creating and generating sources and bibliographies, attaching files (images, audio, video, spreadsheets, PDFs) to your notes, the ability to share notes, and much, much more.

    In the coming months there will be an online version available in addition to the desktop version. The online version will make your NoteScribe database accessible any where you go! Visit http://www.NoteScribe.net to learn more about the program!

    Jake

Tech Tip ~ Note Taking | Liberty Hall Writers

Monday, February 9, 2009

BusinessDictionary.com - Online Business Dictionary

BusinessDictionary.com - Online Business Dictionary

BusinessDictionary.com features over 20,000 definitions and over 115,000 links between related terms providing a clear and concise description of any and all business terms. To succeed in business, it's absolutely essential to have a solid understanding of the terms and concepts used every day in the business world. We have designed our dictionary to help you gain the knowledge you need to achieve your goals in business and in life.

BusinessDictionary.com includes a powerful search tool (at the top of every page), a browse by letter feature, and subject-specific dictionaries to help you learn the terminology you're interested in. In addition, you can subscribe to our free email newsletter, and receive a new term and definition each day, along with links to related information, so you can easily build your knowledge of business lingo every day. We hope you decide to bookmark the BusinessDictionary.com home page and use it whenever you need an accurate, precise definition of a business term.

BusinessDictionary.com is operated by WebFinance Inc., an internet company that designs, builds and nurtures business opportunities where technology and finance intersect. Among WebFinance's other properties are InvestorGuide.com (a comprehensive investor portal) and InvestorWords.com (a financial and investment dictionary). Our goal is to help as many people as possible, and for this reason everything we provide is free. Our sites are collectively used by over a half million people every month.

BusinessDictionary.com - Online Business Dictionary

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Library Hacks » SimplyMap

Library Hacks » SimplyMap 

SimplyMap lets users create professional quality maps for use in presentations, research reports, business plans, or Websites. Data variables can be viewed at the State, County, ZIP Code, Tract and Block Group levels.

Want to know the top 10 wealthiest ZIP codes in your state? How about the top 25 counties with the most elderly residents? These and similar questions are easily answered by ranking locations using any data variable in SimplyMap.

SimplyMap Image

 

SimplyMap includes access to thousands of demographic, business, and marketing data variables such as consumer expenditure, real estate, crime and many more.

Everything you do in SimplyMap can be exported in multiple formats for further customization and analysis. Create and export large amounts of data or detailed reports as Excel or CSV files. Advanced users can even export shapefiles for use in their own GIS software.

Library Hacks » SimplyMap

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Sources And Methods: SAM Goes Back To School, Part 2: Top Firefox Add-Ons For Intel Studies Students

2 tools to look at once I upgrade to ff3 -- hsm

  • Morning Coffee. This add-on allows you to bring up a whole menu of websites with a single click. It is particularly useful if you are working on a project and want to monitor a number of sites routinely and simultaneously.
  • Ubiquity. I almost put this one first. It is one of the most advanced tools I have seen for Firefox. My only hesitation is that it is in extreme Alpha status right now (but getting better quickly!) and it requires Firefox 3. What does it do? Just about everything. Check out the video below

     

    Sources And Methods: SAM Goes Back To School, Part 2: Top Firefox Add-Ons For Intel Studies Students

  • Wednesday, August 27, 2008

    Why Are Senior Female Scientists So Heavily Outnumbered by Men? | Wired Science from Wired.com

     

    Why Are Senior Female Scientists So Heavily Outnumbered by Men?

    By Aaron Rowe EmailMay 31, 2008 | 11:25:50 AMCategories: Letters to WiSci

    Why Are Senior Female Scientists So Heavily Outnumbered by Men? | Wired Science from Wired.com

    There is some funny math in the world of academic science.

    Take my graduate school for example: My class was made up of eight people -- seven women and one man, or 7 to 1. He was Snow White and we were the seven dwarves -- each with a remarkably appropriate nickname. I was Grumpy, should you be curious to know.

    Snow White and at least four of the dwarves have continued on to postdoctoral research jobs. That is a 4 to 3 ratio of women who went on to do a post-doc to those that chose alternate career paths.

    Everything is adding up so far, right? Lots of women are around. Lots of science is being done. All is well.

    The next set of numbers is slightly puzzling, however. That is the ratio of female to male professors in our department, at a well-respected academic institution, is 48 to 7 men to women.

    Interesting reversal, isn’t it? We go from 7 to 1 in grad school to roughly 1 to 7 in professorships.

    Clearly, something does not compute. Where did all the women go? What is happening to all the women en route from graduate school to professorship? Where is the leak? Then again, is it a leak, or more like a pressurized stream? What is applying this pressure to force women out of a career in science? Is it societal pressure to be a mom and take care of the family? Have generations of both men and women perpetuated the belief that in a fist fight between family and work, one or the other has to crawl away a loser? Do some women lack self confidence and convince themselves that they don’t have what it takes to succeed in academic science?

    It is perfectly acceptable, even commendable if women make the choice, which is rightfully theirs, to stay at home, to choose careers outside of science, or to choose, well, anything at all.

    It would be all right if the scientific community is still paying catch up with the rest of society in accepting women into their midst and the ratio will equalize in the next decade (not sure there is evidence either for or against this, but I feel compelled to present it nonetheless).

    It is not acceptable if women are forced to choose between a family and a career in science.

    It is not acceptable if women are feeling unwelcome in the male-dominated, and occasionally inhospitable, scientific community.

    It is not acceptable if their being female is detrimental to their careers.

    So what is the solution? Let women make their own decisions whether to stay or to go. Remove as many obstacles and pressures as possible and let the choice be theirs. Isn’t that the whole point of the much-maligned term, feminism? Institute reasonable day care at universities. Allow for extended maternity leave and the option of paternity leave. Don’t cut women any breaks. They are no less inherently able to achieve than men, regardless of what certain Nobel Prize winners and heads of major Universities may say. They don’t need pity or hand me downs. They just need the freedom to choose.

    Anna Kushnir, PhD

    Anna Kushnir recently earned a doctoral degree from a top academic institution. She is also the creative force behind Lab Life, an excellent blog on the Nature Network.

    Update: These statements are reflective of her experiences and opinions, but they are backed by exhaustive studies: The proportion of female faculty in her department, 14 percent, is exactly equal to the overall average from the top fifty US chemistry departments.

    Wired Science is quite interested in covering other issues at the intersection of science and culture. Feel free to send us your letters.

    Photo: Akash K / flickr

    Why Are Senior Female Scientists So Heavily Outnumbered by Men? | Wired Science from Wired.com

    Tuesday, June 10, 2008

    eHistory

    Some software suggestions for digital media, editing and online storage -- HSM

     

    eHistory

    LibX and Zotero: Firefox Extensions for Librarians and Library Patrons

    Need to look at LibX....Good place to start....HSM

    LibX and Zotero: Firefox Extensions for Librarians and Library Patrons

    Around the Corner - MGuhlin.net : VLC Media Player Tutorials

    Around the Corner - MGuhlin.net : VLC Media Player Tutorials 

    "need to take a look at these"  -- HSM

     

    Around the Corner - MGuhlin.net

    http://mguhlin.net

    Monday, June 09, 2008

    VLC Media Player Tutorials

     

    For a long time, I've wanted to compile my VLC Media Player tutorials--a series of steps on how to convert video/audio, etc--using this awesome, free open source tool that works on Mac, GNU/Linux and Windows. Clay Burell finally broke me down with the final straw via a tweet at 11:00 PM or so at night (past my bedtime).

    So, for fun, I added some tutorials for using VLC Media Player to accomplish the following...only one of them has screenshots, but I'll add those as time allows.

    1. Convert FLV to MOV using VLC Media Player
    2. Save to MP4 from a DVD
    3. Save Audio to MP3/OGG from Video

    As time allows, I'll add more tutorials to this page.

    Around the Corner - MGuhlin.net : VLC Media Player Tutorials