8/10/00
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This newsletter is available to the public at the following locations:
http://library.stanford.edu/depts/swain/nsflibnews/
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Google Advanced Search
http://www.google.com/advanced_search.html
New AltaVista Preview
http://live.altavista.com/scripts/editorial.dll?ei=2005160&ern=y
At last! Google has unveiled an advanced search page. This finally makes Google usable even for
folks like me! Pull down menus allow you to tighten up your search logic, excluding keywords and
domains, and even to look for pages that link to or are similar specific pages you have found
– a neat trick, I must admit. It still does not have full Boolean logic available. I do
not see the allowed use of the all-important “or” connector, for instance. Come on,
Google, this is an improvement, but you can still surely do better than this!
AltaVista (still my personal favorite, but I use many others as well) has released a preview page for the “new AltaVista”, which will have many more directory features and a “power search” in addition to the advanced search feature as well as a customizable start page. See the following discussion from Edupage for more details:
ALTAVISTA TO OFFER NEW POWER SEARCHAltaVista on Wednesday will unveil a new search platform called Power Search that aims to help novice users find relevant information more easily. Power Search offers easy-to-use menus that allow users to restrict searches by date, time, country, and other parameters. In addition, Power Search lets users customize searches and organize results in a variety of ways. “Power Search is Advanced Search with training wheels,” says AltaVista's Vaughn Rhodes. Beyond the improved search capabilities, the new platform offers an E-Mail and Tools productivity application section and one-click access to customized search centers such as AltaVista's Entertainment Center. The new Search Trends feature displays the top 25 search terms of the week and top five lists in a range of popular categories such as CD titles. Meanwhile, the Search Guides feature offers tips on how to use AltaVista's tools to find particular Web sites, products, and images. AltaVista also aims to help users search its own site more easily with a new entertainment service that helps users find items among AltaVista's 6,000 broadcast and Internet radio streams and its 35 million audio, video, and image files. (eWeek Online, 1 Aug 2000 via Edupage)
Over the past few years several of our patrons from academia have asked why the NSF Library did not participate in JSTOR, a consortium of academic libraries that digitize and provide complete archives of important academic journals. We did not participate because at the time JSTOR was only open to purely academic libraries. They have since opened their doors wider, and consequently we are able to bring this fabulous resource to the desktops of NSF staff.
JSTOR creates access only archival issues of journals, not current issues. However, they strive to present the entire archive of each journal, from its first published issue to a “moving wall” of more current issues (i.e., all issues published up to five years before the current date, or two years before the current date, etc.). New journal titles become available as JSTOR is able to reach agreements with publishers, gather a copy of every single older issue that has been published, and digitize them. Since, in most cases, the NSF Library only has sufficient shelf space to retain 5 years of printed journals, JSTOR dovetails neatly to expand our collection without taxing our physical space resources.
One of the important aspects of JSTOR is that it encourages university students and others to look back in time when they are doing research. An oft-voiced complaint in the academic community is that many students are unaware of the importance of research that was published before the “digital age”, and they ignore anything that isn't available online. JSTOR addresses this issue.
Kristen Garlock recently reported on some interesting presentations at the JSTOR Participants' Meeting of ALA, as follows:
In a recent communication, “JSTOR Usage Patterns and the Impact of Electronic Access on Archival Journal Literature” by Kevin Guthrie, several interesting points were made about patterns of usage reflected by JSTOR statistics. Guthrie states:
“As a first measurement of the value of the articles in JSTOR, we analyzed the top ten most frequently viewed and printed articles for each title in the JSTOR database. What we found is that there are more older articles among the top ten than we originally expected. We wondered if this varies by field, and it does. We calculated the average age of these top ten articles for the various fields and found some surprises. In economics, for example, the average age of the top ten most frequently printed and viewed articles was 13 years. More dramatically, in the field of mathematics, the average age of the most used articles was 32 years. These data are by no means conclusive, as some of the JSTOR journals have only been digitized relatively recently, but the early findings seem to contradict existing assumptions about the value of older literature.
Citation data alone do not reliably predict electronic usage. Judging by the most-used articles in JSTOR, citations and usage are not closely correlated, suggesting that citations should not be used as the sole factor in selecting content to be digitized. To give just one example, the most frequently viewed article from one of the top journals in the economics collection has rarely been cited in other articles. The article, published in 1973, was cited only fourteen times between 1974 and 1999. Nevertheless, this article has been viewed 1,895 times and printed 1,402 times since it was made available in JSTOR, making it the 4th most-used article in economics.
The concept of ‘value’ for research articles needs to be clearly understood as libraries consider acquisitions and cancellation decisions for electronic content.
Increasingly, one hears that usage data should be used more aggressively by librarians in acquisition and cancellation decisions for current journal subscriptions. It is important to recognize that usage is only one aspect of the value, not the entire value. Citations and citation impact factors reflect another kind of value.
The fact that top used articles in JSTOR may be infrequently cited, or that top-cited articles may be infrequently used, does not prove that one or the other is more important; rather, it indicates that both components must be considered. Usage statistics provide important information about the value of a journal on a campus, but they are more likely to reflect the value of the journal as a teaching resource than as a research resource. Both perspectives should be taken into account when using these data to help make subscription decisions.”
For more information on JSTOR usage statistics, check http://www.si.umich.edu/PEAK-2000/guthrie.pdf
Kristin reports another interesting use of JSTOR which is illustrated by Fred R. Shapiro, who has searched the JSTOR archives to determine the history of new English words and phrases.
“Unlike other dictionaries, the OED [Oxford English Dictionary – available on CD in the NSF Library] is an historical dictionary in which word usage is traced backed to earliest instance of occurrence. Fred discussed what an enormous task compiling the OED was in the past – thousands of readers using index cards searched through written material for the first instances of words. These were submitted to the OED on 3 x 5 cards, and, until now, submissions have been accepted on faith.
Now, with JSTOR's broad coverage, the ability to search across disciplines, and the ability to sort by date, it is possible to search for word origins much more easily. Fred has been using JSTOR for some time to document earlier usage of several words. … One memorable correction he has made from research in JSTOR is in the date of the phrase ‘lies, damned lies, statistics.’ This phrase has previously been attributed to Mark Twain. Fred discovered this phrase in an 1896 statistics journal (Baines, J. A. ‘Parliamentary Representation in England Illustrated by the Elections of 1892 and 1895.’ Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Vol. 59, No. 1., pp. 38-124).”
Plant and Cell Physiology: US/Canada
http://www.pcp.oupjournals.org/
Plant and Cell Physiology: International
http://intl-pcp.oupjournals.org/
Plant and Cell Physiology (PCP) is an international journal devoted to the publication of original
papers in the biological sciences including: physiology, biochemistry, biophysics, chemistry,
molecular biology, cell biology and gene engineering of plants and micro-organisms. PCP online
contains the full content of each issue of the journal, including all figures and tables, beginning
with the July 2000 issue (Volume 41, Number 7). The full text is searchable by keyword, and the
cited references include hyperlinks to Medline and to the online full text of many other frequently
cited journals.
Through the rest of 2000, the online journal is available through a free-trial period. After that time, access to the full-text of articles is by institutional license, which comes with all institutional subscriptions, or by individual subscription available to print subscribers. All other access (e.g., to Abstracts, eTOCs, searching, Instructions to Authors) is freely available.
EMBO Reports: US/Canada
http://www.embo-reports.oupjournals.org/
EMBO Reports: International
http://intl-embo-reports.oupjournals.org/
EMBO Reports consists of three sections. In the Science & Society section is material on the
impact that politics, society, and the financial world have on the environment in which sciences,
especially life sciences, are performed. Equally, it will show the consequences for society of the
latest scientific research.
The Reviews section provides high-quality reviews of the latest scientific developments, reports on papers of importance which are published in other scientific journals, and incisive reports of meetings at which the latest data are presented.
The final section of EMBO Reports contains shorter, sharply focused scientific reports. These studies from all areas of molecular life sciences are characterised by their quality as well as their interest to readers who are not specialists in that topic. The refereeing process is rapid and expert with weekly online publication of accepted reports to facilitate speedy dissemination.
Access to the full-text of articles is free during 2000, but from 2001 will be by institutional license, which comes with all institutional subscriptions, or by individual subscription available to print subscribers. All other access (e.g., to Abstracts, e-ToCs, searching, Instructions to Authors) is freely available.
Acoustics Research Letters Online (ARLO)
http://asa.aip.org/arlo/
On July 1, 2000 the Acoustical Society of America will launch its second archival journal,
Acoustics Research Letters Online (ARLO), the international electronic letters journal of acoustics.
For the prior 15 months ARLO appeared in the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, JASA
(print and online), as part of the initial testing period. ARLO introduces several advances that
promise to be a model for all publishers of scientific research. In particular, ARLO offers authors
rapid peer review and publication of their letter-sized submissions (in as little as one month) with
its unique Manuscript Management System (MMS), co-developed with the American Institute of Physics
(which calls the system Sci-Edit). Authors are also invited to submit multimedia content, which is
reviewed and archived, as well as color figures when appropriate.
Readers of ARLO have a special benefit as well: ARLO is free to individual readers possessing Netscape or Internet Explorer browsers, guaranteeing maximum worldwide dissemination of authors' research results. Authors pay a manuscript fee, and libraries are asked to pay a nominal subscription fee to support the editorial process, as well as archiving, linking, search functions, and security, which are provided by our publisher, the American Institute of Physics.
The Top American Research Universities (2000) [.pdf, Excel]
http://thecenter.ufl.edu/
Created by the Lombardi Program on Measuring University Performance, part of _TheCenter_, a
privately funded research enterprise focused on the humanities and social sciences, this site
offers an alternative to the better-known published university rankings. Claiming that most of
these rankings “rely on relatively unreliable data” and “focus attention on
relatively insignificant differences among similar institutions,” the site offers an
analysis and data set that rank private and public research universities in accord with nine
institutional characteristics: total research expenditures, federal research expenditures,
endowment assets, annual giving, faculty members in the National Academies, faculty awards,
doctoral degrees, postdoctoral appointees, and entering freshmen SAT scores. The survey then
places them in tiers based on how many top-25 mentions they get. A description of the
methodology and the rankings and data tables (in .pdf and Excel format) are easily accessed
from the main page. [MD] (From the Scout Report)
New Scientist: The Last Word
http://www.newscientist.com/lastword/lastword.html
More than a thousand questions on scientific phenomena receive articulate answers from readers
of the London-based weekly science news magazine, “The New Scientist.” View responses
to queries about bubbles, liquids, and ice; gadgets and inventions; and mysteries and illusions.
It's easy to submit an answer or post a new question to the unanswered questions file. And if you
enjoy the eccentric nooks and crannies of scientific exploration, consider the drunken slug at the
bottom of the bottle or the whimsical little people effect. (From Yahoo's Picks of the Week)
Workshop Envisions National Information Infrastructure for the Physical Sciences
http://www.osti.gov/physicalsciences
“The time is now, the need is now” was the conclusion of a workshop held May 30-31,
2000, at the National Academy of Sciences to address issues and gaps in communicating and using
information in the physical sciences. A panel of distinguished experts in science, science
policy, information science, and scientific publishing envisions a far-reaching, comprehensive
information infrastructure for the physical sciences to increase the productivity of the
scientific enterprise in the United States.
Scientists are changing the way science is being done, and traditional means of access to the scholarly record are no longer sufficient to meet researchers' needs and expectations. Rapid advances in information technology are dramatically altering the nature of scientific communications and are providing ways to realize what could only be envisioned in the past. The report emphasizes that the ability to compete is based on an ability to know quickly.
Information Contact: Dr. Walter L. Warnick, Director, Office of Scientific and Technical Information, (301) 903-7996, walter.warnick@science.doe.gov
Deja Vu
http://www.dejavu.org/
The Web hasn't really been around for that long, but much has changed in its short history and,
in Internet years, a lot has happened. That's why, when you come across a historical survey of
“the Web as we remember it,” it's perfectly fine to use lines like “re-live an
era” or “read about the old times.” Deja Vu makes it clear: we've browsed a
long way, baby. Check out the site's browser emulator, a nifty, interactive tool that allows you
to experience “web surfing” as it happened on the old classics: NCSA Mosaic, Mosaic
Netscape, Lynx, line-mode browser, and others. It's history in the making so, um, “gopher
it.” (From Yahoo's Picks of the Week)
GPO New Electronic Titles
http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/locators/net
A new service, named New Electronic Titles (NET), will help in locating electronic Federal
Government information titles. This tool replaces the Browse Electronic Titles (BET) locator
service.
Each week the NET will contain a list of newly identified online U.S. Government information products added to the FDLP/Electronic Collection (EC). Entries will appear in a true title arrangement. Users will be linked to information products on GPO Access, Federal agency websites, FDLP partnerships and the FDLP/EC archive.
As part of this service, LPS will announce the availability of all new congressional hearings that are to be placed on GPO servers and made available through GPO Access. After four weeks, the oldest NET list will be moved to the NET archive.
Full bibliographic information for the new titles and former BET entries will be available in the online Catalog of U.S. Government Publications (CGP) www.gpo.gov/catalog. The CGP is the prime resource for identifying, locating, and accessing both tangible and online U.S. Government information products.
Adaptive Technology for the Internet: Making Electronic Resources Available to All
http://www.ala.org/editions/openstacks/insidethecovers/mates/mates_toc.html
On July 24, the American Library Association (ALA) announced that the full text of Barbara Mates's
best-selling book is now online and free to all users. Geared toward librarians planning for the
accessibility of electronic resources, the book lays out how to “become ADA compliant,
publicize efforts and welcome a new community of users to the library.” Technologies covered
include HTML coding for accessibility, screen readers, voice recognition systems, and hearing
assistance devices. Offered by chapter in HTML format, this book is an invaluable resource for
library staff and anyone interested in accessibility issues and electronic resources.
[MD] (From the Scout Report)
TransHub – The Encyclopedia of Terminology
http://transhub.cjb.net/
Created and maintained by Michael Molin, this metasite and mailing list indexes a very large number
of glossaries, dictionaries, and encyclopedias in a wide variety of disciplines. Aimed at
translators, TransHub has considerable potential for almost any user. The index is navigated via a
pull-down menu at the bottom of the browser window, which lists resources by category (General,
Legal, Business, Computer, Technical, Science, Medical, and Social) and topic. After selecting a
topic, users must click on the pull-down menu again to select individual resources. The front page
also offers a number of links to major search engines. Clicking on the Enter graphic on the main
page leads users to the archive of the TransHub mailing list, which apparently lists all the new
additions to the site on a monthly basis. Here users can read the logs, subscribe, or perform a
keyword search of the archives. Free registration is required to use this section, but not the
index on the main site. [MD] (From the Scout Report)
LC21: A Digital Strategy For the Library of Congress
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309071445/html/
This report, commissioned by the National Research Council and made available by the National
Academy Press (last mentioned in the February 6, 1999 _Scout Report_) takes a hard look at the
impact of digital information on the Library of Congress's traditional mission (and by
implication, the mission of all US libraries) to collect, preserve, and make accessible the
intellectual work of the American people. Even though the American Memory Website created by
the Library of Congress is hugely successful and a national model for digitizing historical
collections, the report points out that the problem of collecting and preserving materials
that are “born digital” is far more urgent. New digital information is being
created at a rapid pace, and much of it is more ephemeral than the paper-based materials now
become digital at American Memory. The report not only outlines the problem clearly, but makes
recommendations for action. For example, the report urges the Library to immediately define
policies for collecting Websites created in the US, and to form a high-level planning group to
develop digital preservation strategies. LC21 is fascinating reading for all crystal ball gazers
concerned with the future of libraries. [DS] (From the Scout Report)
DoIS
http://dois.mimas.ac.uk/
We are pleased to announce DoIS (Documents in Information Science). DoIS is a bibliographic
database of articles and conference proceedings published in electronic format in the area of
Library and Information Science. DoIS is based in the RePEc
(http://www.repec.org/)
open library model that has a large following in the Economics discipline. In that model,
publishers of documents provide data about their documents on public access servers. These data
are available for the use in digital libraries. RePEc has collected data about 26,000 electronic
papers through 140 contributing archives. It is currently the largest distributed library of
research papers in the world.
The Comprehensive Microbial Resource (CMR) Home Page – TIGR
http://www.tigr.org/tigr-scripts/CMR2/CMRHomePage.spl
The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) has launched the searchable Comprehensive Microbial
Resource (CMR), offering access to data from all (TIGR) genome sequences completed to date.
From the _Aeropyrum pernix K1_ genome through _Vibrio cholerae El Tor N16961_, all genomes or
subsets of each may be queried. The CMR includes the Omniome database containing sequences,
annotations, and associated information “such as taxon and gram stain pattern, the
structure and composition of their DNA molecules … and many attributes of the protein
sequences predicted from the DNA sequence (such as pI and molecular weight).” Genome
researchers will find this new CMR tool useful, as it allows users to mine completed genomes
in ways not previously possible. [LXP] (From the Scout Report)
The Big Picture Book of Viruses
http://www.tulane.edu/~dmsander/Big_Virology/BVHomePage.html
As it's name suggests, this website offers a simple, bright, and bold guide to the fascinating
world of viruses (fortunately, not of the LoveBug variety). Whether you want to search for a
picture by virus name, by structure type, by host, or by the type of disease that the virus
causes – all needs are catered for. And for all budding virologists out there, you even
have the opportunity to contribute your own virus pictures. Check out the link to tutorials and
on-line courses, which offer a basic but comprehensive grounding in this diverse subject.
(From
New Scientist Planet Science)
The Extinction Files
http://www.bbc.co.uk/education/darwin/exfiles/index.htm
Part of the BBC Evolution website, this visually attractive site focuses on natural mass
extinctions, presenting descriptions of the events, species affected, theories, and a nice
selection of hotlinks.
The Santa Cruz Predatory Bird Research Group
http://www2.ucsc.edu/~scpbrg/
Get wrapped up in raptors or take a bird's eye view and get hung up on hawks with the SCPBRG.
Formed in 1975, the Group helped bring the peregrine falcon population of California bank from
the brink and has become a serious resource for agency biologists, industry, and university
researchers looking for expertise in avian problem solving and management of raptors and other
birds. The Group is actually part of the University and is truly a site with hidden talons.
(From
New Scientist Planet Science)
AVEL – Australasian Virtual Engineering Library
http://avel.edu.au/
Launched on July 8 by a consortium of universities and professional groups, this metasite
serves as a gateway for engineers and information technology professionals, with over 2,000
categorized and annotated links to Australasian resources. The database is searchable by
keyword or browseable by seven major categories and numerous sub-categories. The site also
features a search engine for full-text papers that displays abstracts as well as a link to
the full text. Additional resources include job and conference notices, and a latest
resources added section. [MD] (From the Scout Report)
Androids Among Us
http://www.androidworld.com/
“ This site is devoted to androids. An android is an anthropomorphic robot – i.e.
a robot that looks like a human. Many android developers call their creations
”humanoids” rather than androids. We also have robotics links, robot links,
animatronics links, and research links.” This site is extensive and fascinating. It
includes: World's greatest android projects, Entertainment androids Valerie, a Domestic
Android, World's largest robotics sites, World's smallest video cameras, Smaller android
projects, Historical android projects, Androids and robots in the movies, Fun Animatronics
Sites, Android sub-assembly projects, NASA Anthropomorphic Projects and more. Lots of
illustrations add to the sites considerable appeal. (Thanks to BriefMe Magazine)
Field Cameras of the United States: 1879-1930
http://www.fiberq.com/cam/fcam.htm
The years following the Civil War were exhilarating times for imaging technology, with a
surge of innovation in the design and manufacture of field cameras. This homespun database
for collectors of these early cameras is hosted by Mr. “Matthew_Brady” and built
on his research at the George Eastman House. You'll find intriguing images and descriptions
of these hefty, accordion-like antiques, including details of construction, materials,
dimensions, and notes on additional camera features. (From Yahoo's Picks of the Week)
Geomatics Canada
http://www.geomaticscanada.com/
“Geomatics Canada,” a web resource sponsored by Natural Resources
Canada/Ressources Naturelles Canada, with the goal of a better understanding of the
environment, accesses a broad range of subjects related to geomatics. “Geomatics is
the science and technology of gathering, analyzing, interpreting, distributing and using
geographic information. Geomatics encompasses a broad range of disciplines that can be
brought together to create a detailed but understandable picture of the physical world and
our place in it. These disciplines include: 1.) surveying & mapping; 2.) remote sensing;
3.) geographic information systems (GIS); and 4.) global positioning system (GPS).”
From this site, for example, one can find information on how to obtain geospatial data and
satellite photography of Canada. There is also a link to the on-line “National Atlas
of Canada”, “Canadian Earth Observation Network”, and other sites. (From
Infomine)
Earthquake Hazards Program – USGS [.pdf]
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/
National Earthquake Information Center Home Page
http://neic.usgs.gov/
Announced this week, this site will serve as a portal to all US Geological Survey (USGS)
earthquake information, both real-time and historic. At the site, visitors can find
information on past, present, and predicted future earthquake activity; access a range of
publications, maps, and fact sheets; use a number of earthquake education activities; link
to various earthquake research centers; and read in-depth information on selected recent
earthquakes worldwide. While the site does offer some detailed information, it is probably
still best suited for K-12 students and general users. Researchers and university students
will continue to use the National Earthquake Information Center, which offers a searchable
database, near real-time earthquake coordinate information, and global seismograph station
information, among other resources. [MD] (From the Scout Report)
Oceans of Kansas
http://www.oceansofkansas.com/
This Website is the labor of love of Mike Everhart, who in 1978 found his first mosasaur,
an extinct giant marine reptile that resembles an overgrown crocodile. From that point
forward, Everhart devoted his energy to hunting for fossils of marine reptiles, and he now
is Adjunct Curator of Paleontology at the Sternberg Museum of Natural History. Oceans of
Kansas provides information about life in the Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway, a broad
sea that once stretched across much of modern day America, including Kansas. The Smoky
Hills Chalk of Kansas contains hundreds of marine reptile fossils, and visitors to this
Website can view color illustrations and images of mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and other marine
reptile fossils from Kansas and all over the world. This site combines original writings by
Everhart with links to other excellent resources on the Western Interior Seaway, marine
reptiles, and general paleontology. Oceans of Kansas is updated regularly with many
paleontological researchers adding links. Recent features include exciting new
reconstruction paintings from the Paleo-Life Art page and a color photo of a newly restored
mosasaur skull from the Pierre Shale of South Dakota. Whether you are a practicing
paleontologist or just a natural history buff, this information-rich site is not to be
missed. [HCS] (From the Scout Report)
Wired Antarctica
http://www.geophys.washington.edu/People/Students/ginny/antarctica/
Learn more about Antarctica; why is it important and what you can learn there. Researchers
from prestigious institutions in Canada and the U.S. put together this site with lessons,
worksheets, activities, and loads of information about this frozen continent. (From
Blue Web'N)
Entropy on the World Wide Web
http://www.math.washington.edu/~hillman/entropy.html
This directory covers entropy in several areas that include: information and coding theory,
dynamical systems, logic and the theory of algorithms, statistical inference and prediction,
the physical sciences, economics, biology, and the humanities and social sciences. Each
category includes a brief overview of the role of entropy, links to on-line articles and
textbooks, and suggestions for further off-line reading. - cl
(From the Librarian's Index to the Internet)
Element Games
http://www.jlab.org/services/pced/indexpages/elementgames.html
Element Games, from Jefferson Lab, is a series of Internet based games (Java) to test your
knowledge of the elements and memory skills. Element concentration tests your memory as you
have a series of cards, which you are given time to view face up, before they are turned face
down and you have to remember where each cars/element was. Element Hangman or rather the
vanishing atom man, is pretty much like any other hangman game except in this case you have to
guess the element before the atom man loses all of his constituent particles. With the Elemental
Flash cards you have to supply either the element's name or it's chemical symbol. With the
Element Matching Game you need to match the element with the symbol. The Elemental Math gets a
bit more tricky as you have to calculate protons, neutrons or electrons of the element from the
information supplied. There are a couple of puzzles to print out for use in the classroom, bingo
and a word search. I'm not saying that chemistry isn't fun but this is definitely a more fun way
of committing the elements to memory than merely repeating them over and over again in sequence.
(From Chemweb)
Scuba Physics
http://aquaholic.com/gasses/laws.htm
While one of the Alchemist Ed's is off on his hols, diving nonetheless, webpicks found a site
with Buoyancy and Gas Laws, as applied to diving. So there is a practical value to paying
attention in class to all those Laws derived many moons ago. These pages hosted by
aquaholic.com
go from buoyancy, and understanding The Archimedes Principle, to Dalton's Law and the partial
pressure of gases, paying particular attention to oxygen and nitrogen, of course! There is also
a Java Pressure / Volume Calculator, which uses Boyle's Law to calculate volume changes with
depth. It might be worth looking at the Introduction to Gas Theory before diving into Boyle's
Law, if you'll pardon the pun. (From ChemWeb)
Particle Accelerators
http://public.web.cern.ch/Public/ACCELERATORS/accintro.html
“ By accelerating particles to very high energies and smashing them into targets, or into
each other physicists can unravel the forces acting between them. CERN's accelerators are
amongst the world's largest and most complex scientific instruments. Built at the leading edge
of technology, these are some of the finest monuments of 20th century science.” This site
from CERN has a wealth of information, nicely illustrated, on how the varieties of particle
accelerators work, the accelerators at CERN, and various uses for these fabulous machines.
Glossary of Mathematical Mistakes
http://www.mathmistakes.com/
“This is a list of mathematical mistakes made over and over by advertisers, the media,
reporters, politicians, activists, and in general many non-math people.” Includes the
mistake of the month (this month it is mysterious alternative movie soundtracks), mistake
archive, math mistakes in the news, puzzles and problems, sources and links. This website is
fun, even for folks who don't like math! (Thanks to BriefMe Magazine)
The Mathematical Atlas
http://www.math.niu.edu/~rusin/known-math/index/tour.html
“A brief tour of the broad subfields of mathematics. It is our intention that this tour
provide enough description of the terrain to help you select the heading of the Mathematics
Subject Classification appropriate for a specific inquiry. (There are 63 main headings and
thousands of subheadings; the areas with index pages of their own offer a tour of their
subareas and links to adjacent territory.)” This interesting website provides
definitions, brief history, bibliographies, and brief explanations of every area of
mathematics.
2MASS Second Incremental Data Release Gallery
http://www.ipac.caltech.edu/2mass/gallery/second/
2MASS Homepage
http://pegasus.astro.umass.edu/GradProg/2mass.html
On July 14, NASA announced the public release of a huge collection of images (1.9 million) from
the Two-Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS), the most thorough census of stars ever made. Using two
automated, 51-inch telescopes, one in Arizona and the other in Chile, the three-year-old survey
has so far taken images of half a million galaxies and 162 million stars. By its completion in
2001, the survey's catalogs will contain more than 300 million objects. A sampling of these
images has been placed online at the 2MASS site at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center
(IPAC) at the California Institute of Technology. The twelve-page gallery contains some amazing
images, including the center of the Milky Way, the Sombrero galaxy, the Crab Nebula, and the
Dark Nebula, offered as large thumbnails which link to a full-sized image. Users can learn more
about 2MASS at the survey's homepages at Caltech and the University of Massachusetts.
[MD] (From the Scout Report)
The Spacewatch Project, University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory
http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/spacewatch/index.html
Last week, collaborators from Harvard and University of Arizona astronomy labs announced their
discovery of a new moon, S/1999, orbiting Jupiter. Details of the discovery and other interesting
developments in astronomy can be found at the Spacewatch Project page, provided by the University
of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. The Hot News page houses black-and-white .gif images
of the new outer Jovian Satellite, S/1999. A timeline of Spacewatch history, table of asteroid
detections, and an archive of images (also black-and-white) from Spacewatch telescopes are among
the features of this site. For those interested in the mechanical aspect of the project,
full-color images of the Spacewatch telescopes accompanied by descriptions and diagrams and a
summary of survey scanning and object recovery techniques are available. Other parts of the site
include Publications, People, Funding, and Links. [HCS] (From the Scout Report)
APA – What Makes a Good President?
http://www.apa.org/releases/presidents.html
How do Bush and Gore match up to the key characteristics the American Psychological Asso. has rated
in past presidents? Check out this interesting news release and make your determination.
Neuroscience Tutorial
http://thalamus.wustl.edu/course/
The Washington University School of Medicine provides this impressive, illustrated tutorial on
clinical neuroscience, offered in conjunction with the University's first-year course for medical
students. Beginning with a graphic introduction to the brain (Coronal and horizontal sections),
the site covers the essentials of clinical neuroscience including the Basic visual pathway; Basic
somatosensory pathway; Basic motor pathway; Auditory and vestibular systems; Spinal motor
structures; Basal ganglia and cerebellum; and Sleep and language, among other topics. Each section
is illustrated with color graphics accompanied by text. The site also includes an index (for
improved navigation), as well as a series of links. [LXP] (From the Scout Report)
Economicsearch.com
http://www.economicsearch.com/
Designed as a one-stop information source for economists and economics students, Economicsearch.com
offers an information-rich collection of economics resources. One of the highlights of the site,
the research section, includes a vast collection of links to tried-and-true resources from
organizations including the Census Bureau, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Federal Reserve
System, and the United Nations. The links are sensibly organized for browsing, and can also be
searched by keyword. Economicsearch also contains several tutorials and a _Gazette_ of research and
opinion pieces on topics including the Asia Crisis and the Microsoft monopoly. Interested users will
want to subscribe to the weekly electronic newsletter _EconNews_ for the latest economics-related
news. [EM] (From the Scout Report)
Folk Psychology vs. Mental Simulation: How Minds Understand Minds [.pdf]
http://www.umsl.edu/~philo/Mind_Seminar/New%20Pages/papers.html
This Website “provides access to work that was discussed at, inspired by, or is otherwise
relevant to the seminar 'Folk Psychology vs. Mental Simulation: How Minds Understand Minds,' a
National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminar for College Teachers held at the University
of Missouri-St. Louis” last July. Folk Psychology and Mental Simulation are two competing
theories designed to explain how “people understand, predict, and explain one another's
actions, thoughts, and motivations”; both have implications for the understanding and
possible treatment of Autism among other conditions. The site currently features fifteen articles
and papers – some with abstracts – with another ten to be added soon. Titles include
“Autism and the 'Theory of Mind' Debate,” “Developing Commonsense Psychology:
Experimental Data and Philosophical Data,” and “A Cognitive Theory of Pretense.”
Articles are available in .pdf or HTML formats. [DC] (From the Scout Report)
American Indians of the Pacific Northwest
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award98/wauhtml/
The American Indians of the Pacific Northwest is the product of the University of Washington
Libraries and this digital collection integrates over 2,300 photographs and 7,700 pages of text
relating to the American Indians in two cultural areas of the Pacific Northwest, the Northwest
Coast and Plateau. These resources illustrate many aspects of life and work, including housing,
clothing, crafts, transportation, education, and employment. The materials are drawn from the
extensive collections of the University of Washington Libraries, the Cheney Cowles Museum/Eastern
Washington State Historical Society in Spokane, and the Museum of History and Industry in Seattle.
Pharaohs of the Sun: Akhenaten, Nefertiti, Tutankhamen [QuickTime]
http://www.artic.edu/aic/exhibitions/pharaohs_exhib/amarna/ex_hi_ind.html
This new online exhibit coincides with the installation of over 250 objects from the time of the
Pharaohs which opened at the Art Institute of Chicago last week. The Website gives visitors the
chance to view over 100 artifacts from the exhibit, complete with descriptions of the objects
and their cultural contexts. Since many of the objects are three-dimensional, a QuickTime
application lets users rotate the object 240 degrees in either direction and zoom in on details.
Other sections of the site provide image-supplemented commentary on religion, art, culture, and
daily life in the time of Akhenaten as well as descriptions of the excavations that brought the
artifacts to the museum and an interactive explanation of how archaeologists piece their finds
together. A section of educational materials for teachers is also included.
[DC] (From the Scout Report)
German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP): A Representative Longitudinal Study of Private Households in the Federal Republic of Germany [SPSS, SAS, TDA, STATA, and ASCII]
http://www.diw-berlin.de/soep/e.faltblat.html
The German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP) is a wide-ranging representative longitudinal study of
private households in Germany. The same private households, persons and families have been
surveyed annually since 1984. In June of 1990, “the survey was extended to include the
territory of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR).” Some 5,900 households
participated in the first survey in 1984, and 4,285 households were included in the latest wave
in 1998, giving the survey a high degree of stability. Topics in the survey study include
household composition, occupational and family biographies, employment and professional mobility,
earnings, health, and personal satisfaction. Separate topical modules also cover such issues as
social security, education, time allocation, and family and social services. According to its
creators, “the GSOEP data give researchers the opportunity to observe and to analyze
political and social transformations.” In addition, the site's search engine features
extensive search capabilities that provide detailed information on the variables in the GSOEP
dataset. Users can determine statistical parameters and then output frequencies information,
item correspondence, and even generate SPSS, SAS, TDA (6.1), and Stata (4.0) command files.
[DC] (From the Scout Report)
Making the Macintosh
http://library.stanford.edu/mac/
This project chronicles the seminal history of Apple's Macintosh computer via primary source
documents, interviews, and images. Scholar Theodore Roszak writes about the connection between
sixties and seventies counterculture and the rise of personal computing in “From Satori
to Silicon Valley.” An essay called “Technical Writing and the Macintosh”
highlights the unique symbiosis between documentation and development as the Macintosh evolved.
Papers on the role of user groups, the design of the mouse, and the influence of innovative
marketing strategies offer tools to understand public adaptation of new technologies, then and
now.
Nug 30 Quadratic Assignment Problem Solved by 1,000 Computers
http://www-unix.mcs.anl.gov/metaneos/nug30/
The MetaNEOS Project, a collaboration between computational optimization researchers and the
Condor and Globus metacomputing teams, presents this site covering the solution to nug30
Quadratic Assignment Problem (QAP). The nug30 QAP is a problem that challenged the optimization
technology community from 1968 until this June, when researchers at the University of Iowa and
Argonne National Laboratories announced that they had solved the problem in seven days using
1,000 computers at 30 locations. This site furnishes general information about QAPs, the
history of the nug30 QAP, links to press releases, a list of the computational pool of
processors used in solving the problem, and links to some of the computational optimization
labs involved. This information-rich, newsy resource will appeal to many computer scientists.
[HCS] (From the Scout Report)
Free Access to IT Knowledge Academic Edition
http://corpitk.earthweb.com/
ITKnowledge.com has/is planning to offer an academic version of its ITKnowledge.com, the service
that offers access to the full-text of trade books in computer science.
Free access to the Academic Edition will be available until August 15, 2000 from http://corpitk.earthweb.com/ using the following logon information [User name: MU1, Password: 7q7q7q (if required)]
General information on the Academic edition is available at: http://academic.itknowledge.com/
IT Knowledge.com is a most impressive service with a remarkable collection of computer books. (Thanks to Gerry McKiernan)
The following items are from Edupage. To subscribe to Edupage: send mail to: listproc@educom.unc.edu with the message: subscribe edupage Anonymous (if your name is Anonymous; otherwise, substitute your own name). To unsubscribe send a message to: listproc@educom.unc.edu with the message: unsubscribe edupage. (If you have subscription problems, send mail to: manager@educom.unc.edu.)
IBM SUPERCOMPUTER DETAILS OCEAN FOR DOD
The U.S. Department of Defense has procured an IBM supercomputer to model the behavior of the
world's oceans, helping to protect military and commercial ships from maritime disaster. The
IBM RS/6000 SP will monitor the ocean's behavior, predict weather and ocean conditions,
simulate battle situations, and design new aircraft and ships. “High performance
technology of this magnitude gives us unparalleled capabilities in the daily ocean and global
scale modeling we perform to support worldwide DOD operations,” said Landry Bernard,
technical director of the Naval Oceanographic Office, where the IBM RS/6000 SP will be
installed. The RS/6000 SP uses 1,336 Power3-II copper microprocessors to power its 2 trillion
calculations per second, which makes it 170 times faster than “Deep Blue,” the
IBM computer that beat chess champion Gary Kasparov. IBM beat out five other vendors to win
the contract, which is valued at $12 million.
(Federal Computer Week Online, 4 Aug 2000 via Edupage).
SAVING THE NATION'S DIGITAL LEGACY
The National Academy of Sciences released a report yesterday severely criticizing how the
Library of Congress has conducted the archiving of electronic material. The report says the
library has neither the digital storage capacity nor the technical expertise necessary to
preserve the immense amount of copyrighted material based on the Internet and other
electronic sources. Furthermore, the library is so dependent on bureaucratic measures that it
cannot react quickly enough to preserve Web sites and other such media that may not exist for
long. For example, there is no record of Web sites that went offline before 1996. The library
has acknowledged its shortcomings, but its head librarian cautions that the library is likely
to be short on funding for its electronic archives. Still, the head librarian believes that
the library will be able to maintain these archives through partnerships with other libraries
and institutions as well as advances in the library's own archiving systems. The Library of
Congress, like all major research libraries, must also determine what part of the wealth of
electronic content is worthy of saving.
(New York Times, 27 July 2000 via Edupage).
STUDY FINDS WEB BIGGER THAN WE THINK
The Web is expanding so rapidly that today's search engines only cover a fraction of the
existing pages, but some companies are developing new search software that will tap the volumes
of information that are now part of the so-called “invisible Web.” BrightPlanet, a
company that offers sophisticated search software called LexiBot, on Wednesday released a study
estimating that the Web is 500 times larger than the segment covered by standard search engines
such as Yahoo! and AltaVista. Although the Web now holds about 550 billion documents, search
engines index a combined total of 1 billion pages, BrightPlanet says. One reason that search
engines have not kept up with the number of pages on the Web is that data is increasingly stored
in large databases maintained by government agencies, universities, and companies. The dynamic
information housed in databases is difficult for traditional search engines to access, because
the search software is designed to locate static pages. However, BrightPlanet created its
LexiBot to find information in databases, as well as data that is covered by traditional search
engines. LexiBot targets advanced users in the academic and scientific communities.
(CNet, 26 July 2000 via Edupage).
FEW NOTICE $10,000 KIOSK SET UP TO MAKE GOVERNMENT ACCESSIBLE
An Internet kiosk was installed in a grocery store in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, as part of
a federal effort to form a closer link between the government and citizens. The General Services
Administration (GSA) is testing the kiosks, and has already sent the devices to several other
cities. The $10,000 kiosk provides information about birth certificates, driver's licenses,
student loans, taxes, and Social Security. Users can also print out federal and local forms and
e-mail elected officials. The kiosks will help D.C. and federal governments to better serve
constituents, says D.C. Deputy Mayor Norman Dong. The GSA has purchased 36 kiosks, all of which
will contain the same federal information. Meanwhile, local governments will be able to customize
their section of the kiosks to provide information relevant to their specific region. Although
few shoppers noticed the new D.C. kiosk, one user suggested that the device might catch on as
people become more comfortable with technology.
(Washington Times, 31 July 2000 via Edupage).
ONLINE CLASSES TEST INTENSITY, DISCIPLINE
Educators and students are beginning to understand both the advantages and the hardships of
online education. Online classes have enjoyed tremendous growth in popularity in recent years.
For example, the number of online students at the University of Phoenix has grown 60 percent in
each of the past three years. Many students in online classes believe they work harder than
those in comparable “real-world” classes. Online students often find themselves
checking their classes' discussion sites seven days a week in order to keep up with their
instructors and classmates, and some claim instructors are more likely to challenge students
whom they cannot see. Teachers also must struggle to keep up with a large number of students,
many of whom expect round-the-clock assistance. However, some teachers laud online classes for
forcing students to participate in order to succeed. These teachers also believe online classes
stimulate the thinking process in a way traditional classes cannot. Still, many observers
believe online classes require some real-world interaction, if only the occasional phone call
between professor and student. Furthermore, observers recommend online classes only for graduate
or continuing education students.
(Baltimore Sun, 31 July 2000 via Edupage).
$45 MILLION GRANT AWARDED TO BUY SUPERCOMPUTER
The National Science Foundation yesterday awarded $45 million to the Pittsburgh Supercomputing
Center to purchase a new supercomputer from Compaq. The new supercomputer will perform 6 trillion
mathematical operations each second, making it the fastest nonmilitary supercomputer in the world,
Compaq claims. The most powerful military supercomputer, currently being installed in Livermore,
Calif., will be able to perform 12 trillion mathematical operations each second. The foundation
intends its award to help make civilian supercomputers more comparable to these powerful military
computers. After its installation is completed in 2001, the new Pittsburgh supercomputer will be
employed for a wide range of scientific projects such as climate modeling and materials science,
and scientists are excited about the potential discoveries the powerful new computer could permit.
Industry observers were surprised when the foundation selected Compaq rather than supercomputer
giants IBM or Intel to build the new machine.
(New York Times, 4 Aug 2000 via Edupage).
ARMY OUTLINES GOALS OF ONLINE LEARNING PROGRAM
The U.S. Army is seeking technology partners to implement and support its online equivalent of the
GI Bill of Rights for veterans. Dubbed the Army University Access Online project, the U.S. Army's
single-contract, multiple-vendor deal is intended to help recruit and retain soldiers and build an
IT skilled soldier and civilian base. The winning vendor must build the site and supply each
soldier with a laptop, printer, an ISP account, and a comprehensive array of university and college
courses. Rewiring military facilities and administrative support and training also come with the
$550 million, six-year contract to be awarded by December. The ultimate goal is to have all one
million Army soldiers and their spouses enjoying access to the program, but recruits are expected
to have laptops by January.
(DG News Service, 2 Aug 2000 via Edupage).
FCC CITES A HIGHER-SPEED DIGITAL DIVIDE
Although a larger number of Americans have high-speed Internet access, such service is not as
prevalent in rural, inner-city, and tribal locations, according to a report released yesterday by
the FCC. The Congress-mandated report revealed that in Zip codes representing 91 percent of the
U.S. population, there is some level of high-speed Internet access. However, such services are
overwhelmingly offered in wealthy urban and suburban locations, which some experts believe
highlights the “digital divide” that is developing in terms of race and wealth. FCC
Chairman William E. Kennard says the market must be closely monitored to ensure equal access. The
report found that areas with less access to high-speed services are typically those with large
numbers of minorities and low-income residents. Still, just 1 percent of the American public had
access to high-speed Internet services at the end of 1999, up from 0.3 percent in 1998. Kennard
says the government must encourage equal access to high-speed services.
(Washington Post, 4 Aug 2000 via Edupage).
CAMPUS-COMPUTING OFFICIALS RANK THEIR WORRIES IN EDUCAUSE SURVEY
IT administrators on college campuses ranked the importance of a range of technology issues in a
recent survey from education-technology consortium EDUCAUSE. The largest emerging issue for campus
IT officials is distance education, according to the e-mail survey of 464 high-ranking
administrators. Meanwhile, the top immediate concerns are obtaining financing for IT and offering
technology support to faculty members. Other issues toward the top of the list include strategic
planning, hiring and retaining skilled IT workers, electronic-learning environments, online student
services, and network support services. Purchasing and installing campuswide administrative systems
ranked as the most expensive efforts. Among the issues of lesser importance to the administrators
were digital libraries, vendor relations, outsourcing, Java, and digital records management.
(Chronicle of Higher Education Online, 3 Aug 2000 via Edupage).
PRIVACY PLAN LIKELY TO KICK OFF DEBATE
John Podesta, the White House chief of staff, opened a can of worms when he pledged to rework
the nation's privacy laws, granting e-mail and mobile phone messages the same safeguards against
government monitoring that apply to telephone calls. Some privacy advocates claim the proposal
would actually reduce the security Internet communications currently enjoy under the Cable Act
of 1984. Although phone taps requested by federal agencies can be granted under suspicion of
probable cause, the Cable Act can only grant a tap on a cable modem user's e-mail with a court
order based on “clear and convincing evidence” of criminal activity. Cable Act
supporters like Marc Rotenberg, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, do not
want the government to make the telephone wiretap law the privacy baseline, and say the tip-off
to surveillance targets is important as well. Fellow Cable Act supporter Barry Steinhardt,
associate director of the ACLU, agrees that the Cable Act should be the security baseline.
Supporters of the Clinton administration's plan include Peter P. Swire, the federal chief
privacy officer, who says that the reduction of cable privacy laws is necessary to prevent
Internet networks from becoming centers of criminal activity.
(New York Times Online, 4 Aug 2000 via Edupage).
Baseball Heckle Depot
http://www.heckledepot.com/
Need some snappy one-liners to torment the opponents's right fielder? Did the umps forget their
glasses again? The Baseball Heckle Depot will serve all your heckling needs, with over 660
wisecracks and putdowns. Organized by heckle recipient (umpires, pitchers, fielders, and batters),
the site is easy to navigate, also offering chants, posters, and some ballplayer comebacks. Other
content includes a ranked list of ballpark fans and a heckling hall of fame. Users can also print
out the visiting team's roster (and follow a link to their salaries) and vote for the heckle of
the month. [MD] (From the Scout Report)
Error Message Haiku
In Japan, they have replaced the impersonal and unhelpful Microsoft error messages with their own
Japanese haiku poetry, each only 17 syllables, 5 syllables in the first line, 7 in the second,
five in the third…
Oh, a file that big?
It might be very useful.
But now it is gone.The Web site you seek
Cannot be located but
Countless more exist.Chaos reigns within.
Reflect, repent, and reboot.
Order shall return.Aborted effort:
Close all that you have worked on.
You ask far too much.Windows NT crashed.
I am the Blue Screen of Death.
No one hears your screams.Yesterday it worked.
Today it is not working.
Windows is like that.First snow, then silence.
This thousand dollar screen dies
So beautifully.With searching comes loss
And the presence of absence:
My Novel? not found.The Tao that is seen
Is not the true Tao until
You bring fresh toner.Stay the patient course.
Of little worth is your ire.
The network is down.A crash reduces
Your expensive computer
To a simple stone.Three things are certain:
Death, taxes, and lost data.
Guess which has occurred.You step in the stream,
But the water has moved on.
This page is not here.Out of memory.
We wish to hold the whole sky,
But we never will.Having been erased,
The document you're seeking
Must now be retyped.Serious error.
All shortcuts have disappeared.
Screen. Mind. Both are blank.(Thanks to Wendell Piez)
All items from the Scout Report are copyright Susan Calcari, 1994-2000. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of the Scout Report provided the copyright notice and this paragraph is preserved on all copies. The InterNIC provides information about the Internet to the US research and education community under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation: NCR-9218742. The Government has certain rights in this material.
Blue Web'n is a searchable library of Blue-Ribbon Web sites categorized by grade level, content area, and type. Visit Blue Web'n online at http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/bluewebn/.
Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this newsletter are those of the participants (authors), and do not necessarily represent the official views, opinions, or policy of the National Science Foundation.