11/29/02
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This newsletter is available to the public at the following locations:
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SPARC Partner Documenta Mathematica Contributes E-Publishing Savings to New Prize for Mathematicians
http://www.mathematik.uni-bielefeld.de/DMV/Gauss/
Journal Editor Cites Desire To “Return Science to Scientists”
Washington, DC - SPARC partner Documenta Mathematica has contributed
savings gleaned from electronic publication of a recent special journal
edition to the creation of a new prize for the international math community.
The prize, known as the Carl Friedrich Gauss Prize, includes a medal and EUR
10,000. It will be awarded by the International Mathematical Union (IMU) and
administered by the German Math Society (Deutsche Mathematiker-Vereinigung, or
DMV). The prize will be given every four years during the International
Congress of Mathematicians, alongside the Fields Medal. The first award will
be given in 2006.
“SPARC is founded on the idea of returning science to scientists and Documenta Mathematica has long put that theory into practice,” said Ulf Rehmann, managing editor of Documenta Mathematica. “Redirecting our earnings back into research, rather than giving it to commercial science publishers, is both logical and rewarding. It is our way of illustrating that electronic journals can succeed in returning science to its rightful owners, thus pushing research forward.”
Documenta Mathematica's ability “to produce two thirds of the Proceedings before the Congress and one third immediately after is a remarkable demonstration of the potential to publish a major book at minimal cost with no commercial assistance,” said David Mumford, the IMU president who presided over the conference.
Founded by the DMV in 1995, Documenta Mathematica is a free, peer-reviewed electronic journal covering general mathematics. The DMV awarded Documenta Mathematica the contract to produce the ICM'98 Proceedings as an extra volume, with a grant of EUR 25,000 to cover production costs. As an established electronic journal with little overhead, Documenta Mathematica produced the electronic version of the proceedings for only EUR 1,250. It transferred back to the DMV the savings plus EUR 6,500 earned in sales of the edition, for a total contribution of EUR 30,250. The DMV then used this contribution and other savings achieved at ICM'98 to found the Carl Friedrich Gauss Prize, announced earlier this year.
For further information about Documenta Mathematica: http://www.mathematik.uni-bielefeld.de/documenta/Welcome-eng.html and http://www.mathematik.uni-bielefeld.de/~rehmann/OAI_2002/index.html. For further information about the Carl Friedrich Gauss Prize: http://www.mathematik.uni-bielefeld.de/DMV/Gauss/.
Government Shuts Down PubScience
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A17568-2002Nov20.html
The United States Department of Energy shut down PubScience, an Internet
site that catalogued government and academic science research, in response to
corporate complaints that it competed with commercial services. Searching on
PubScience was free, with the service linking either to free full texts or to
payment systems for information that was for sale. Two commercial equivalents
also offer free searching, with academic literature available for a fee.
Researchers worry that commercial companies will control access to and charge
fees for information and research that was created with public money. Closing
PubScience will save the government $200,000 a year. Washington Post, 21
November 2002 via Edupage.
Having persuaded the Energy Department to pull the plug on PubScience, a Web site that offered free access to scientific and technical articles, commercial publishers are taking aim at government-funded information services offering free legal and agricultural data. Two in particular rile SIIA members: ‘One is law-related, the other has to do with agriculture,’ LeDuc said. He declined to identify them further. One site the SIIA is unlikely to challenge is PubMed, the National Library of Medicine site that provides free access to millions of medical articles and research papers. PubMed was established much earlier and has a strong foothold, LeDuc said. “We have no intention of going after PubMed.” (From the Article via Resource Shelf (http://resourceshelf.freepint.com/archives/2002_11_01_resourceshelf_archive.html/#85673267))
The Scientific American 50 Award
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=00052728-1BFF-1DD0-A060809EC5880106
Scientific American is pleased to honor these 50 individuals, teams,
companies and other organizations. Through their many accomplishments in
2001-2002, they have demonstrated clear, progressive views of what our
technological future could be, as well as the leadership, knowledge and
expertise essential to realizing those visions. Congratulations. Fields
include:
Differential Susceptibility of Older People to Environmental Hazards
http://www7.nationalacademies.org/bcsse/What's_New.html
The National Academies hold a workshop on “Differential Susceptibility of
Older People to Environmental Hazards.” The meeting features the Environmental
Protection Agency's Christie Whitman along with many other experts.
Participate by listening to a live audio webcast (requires free RealPlayer)
and submitting questions using an e-mail form, both accessible on the
National-Academies.org home page beginning at 9 a.m. EST Thursday, Dec. 5.
More workshop information available on the Web at:
http://www7.nationalacademies.org/bcsse/What's_New.html
AAAS Luncheon Seminar
http://www.aaas.org/spp/wspa/
Seminar Dec. 2 (Mon.) Professor Jeffrey D. Sachs The Washington Science
Policy Alliance is pleased to invite you to a luncheon seminar entitled “The
Economics of Science for Sustainable Development,” featuring Professor Jeffrey
D. Sachs, world-renowned economist and Director of the Columbia University
Earth Institute. The seminar will be held in the AAAS Auditorium (1200 New
York Avenue, NW, 2nd floor, Washington, DC at Metro Center) on Monday,
December 2, 2002. Dr. Sachs' talk with begin promptly at 12:00 noon, and
following questions and discussion, lunch will be served. The event should
wrap up by about 1:30 p.m. For more information or to RSVP, please go to
http://www.aaas.org/spp/wspa/
PCAST Technology Transfer Forum
http://www.rand.org/scitech/stpi/TechTransfer/index.html
PCAST Technology Transfer Forum Thursday, December 12, 2002
RAND Washington Office (directions)
1200 South Hayes Street, Arlington, VA
Room 4204
This PCAST forum will discuss technology transfer of federally funded
R&D. To preregister to address the panel during the Open Forum, complete
and submit the information requested below before midnight December 6, 2002.
Note that all preregistered speakers will address the panel in the order in
which their online registrations were received. Those wanting to speak who do
not preregister online before midnight December 6, 2002, will be allowed to
address the panel after all preregistered speakers have made their
presentations. All speakers will be allowed between 3 and 5 minutes to address
the panel, with the exact amount of time allotted to all speakers announced on
the day of the meeting.
Institute of Medicine Annual Meeting Presentations
Audio and slide presentations are available from the Institute of Medicine
annual meeting held October 14 and 15. Day one of the annual meeting addressed
“Genomics and the Future of Health and Society” and day two focused on
“Organizational Change and Leadership.”
http://www.iom.edu/IOM/IOMHome.nsf/Pages/2002+Annual+Meeting+Agenda+Genomics
http://www.iom.edu/IOM/IOMHome.nsf/Pages/2002+Annual+Meeting+Agenda+leadership
Protecting America's Freedom in the Information Age, Task Force on National Security in the Information Age.
Markle Foundation, Oct. 2002.
http://www.markletaskforce.org/
Preparing for the Revolution: Information Technology and the Future of the Research University.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10545.html
Who Will Keep the Public Healthy? Educating Public Health Professionals for the 21st Century (prepublication).
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10542.html
Frontiers in High Energy Density Physics: The X-Games of Contemporary Science (prepublication).
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10544.html
An Assessment of Precision Time and Time Interval Science and Technology.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10541.html
An Assessment of Non-Lethal Weapons Science and Technology (prepublication).
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10538.html
Toward New Partnerships In Remote Sensing: Government, the Private Sector, and Earth Science Research.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10500.html?onpi_listserv101802
The End of Stress As We Know It.
John Henry Press, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10247.html?onpi_listserv101802
Down to Earth: Geographical Information for Sustainable Development in Africa.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10455.html?onpi_listserv102502
Research Opportunities in Geography at the U.S. Geological Survey.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10486.html?onpi_listserv102502
Immunization Safety Review: SV40 Contamination of Polio Vacccine and Cancer.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10534.html?onpi_listserv102502
Immunization Safety Review: Hepatitis B Vaccine and Demyelinating Neurological Disorders.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10393.html?onpi_listserv102502
Scientific and Policy Considerations in Developing Smallpox Vaccination Options: A Workshop Report.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10520.html?onpi_listserv102502
Discouraging Terrorism: Some Implications of 9/11.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10489.html?onpi_listserv102502
The Common Thread: A Story of Science, Politics, Ethics, and the Human Genome.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10373.html?onpi_listserv102502
Lehigh University has launched Digital Bridges at http://bridges.lib.lehigh.edu/index.html. Digital Bridges is a collection of thirty representative 19th century American bridge engineering monographs, manuals, and documents from the Lehigh University Libraries' Special Collections.
An Introduction to Stem Cell Research.
Department of the Parliamentary Library, Australian Parliament.
http://www.aph.gov.au/library/pubs/CIB/2002-03/03cib06.pdf
Key Ethical Issues in Embryonic Stem Cell Research.
Department of Parliamentary Libraries, Parliament of Australia.
http://www.aph.gov.au/library/pubs/CIB/2002-03/03cib05.pdf
The Sixth Framework Programme (2002-2006).
European Union, 2002.
http://europa.eu.int/comm/research/fp6/index_en.html
Fostering Rapid Advances in Health Care: Learning from System Demonstrations.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10565.html?onpi_listserv112202
The Internet Under Crisis Conditions: Learning from September 11.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10569.html?onpi_listserv112202
Freight Capacity for the 21st Century -- Special Report 271.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10568.html?onpi_listserv112202
Animal Biotechnology: Science Based Concerns.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10418.html?onpi_listserv112202
The National Plant Genome Initiative: Objectives for 2003-2008.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10562.html?onpi_listserv112202
Scientific Data for Decision Making Toward Sustainable Development: Senegal River Basin Case Study -- Summary of a Workshop.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10546.html?onpi_listserv112202
Improving the Design of the Scientists and Engineers Statistical Data System (SESTAT).
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10571.html?onpi_listserv112202
Theoretical Foundations for Decision Making in Engineering Design.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10566.html?onpi_listserv112202
The Richard and Hinda Rosenthal Lectures--2001: Exploring Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10547.html?onpi_listserv112202
Terrorism: Perspectives from the Behavioral and Social Sciences.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10570.html?onpi_listserv112202
Deadly Lessons: Understanding Lethal School Violence.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10370.html?onpi_listserv112202
Inclusion of Women in Clinical Trials: Policies for Population Subgroups.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10572.html?onpi_listserv112202
Escherichia coli O157:H7 in Ground Beef: Review of a Draft Risk Assessment.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10528.html?onpi_listserv112202
Touch the Universe: A NASA Braille Book of Astronomy.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10307.html?onpi_listserv112202
Defining the Mandate of Proteomics in the Post-Genomics Era: Workshop Report.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10560.html?onpi_listserv111502
National Security and Homeland Defense: Challenges for the Chemical Sciences in the 21st Century.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10543.html?onpi_listserv111502
The Future of the Public's Health in the 21st Century.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10548.html?onpi_listserv111502
Speaking of Health: Assessing Health Communication Strategies for Diverse Populations.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10018.html?onpi_listserv111502
Evaluating and Improving Undergraduate Teaching in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10024.html?onpi_listserv111502
Information to Measure Compliance with International Labor Standards: Summary of a Workshop.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10563.html?onpi_listserv111502
Preparing Our Teachers: Opportunities for Better Reading Instruction.
NAP, 2002.
http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10130.html?onpi_listserv111502
Engines of Our Ingenuity
http://www.uh.edu/engines/
The Engines of Our Ingenuity is a radio program that tells the story of how
our culture is formed by human creativity. Written and hosted by John
Lienhard, it is heard nationally on Public Radio and produced by KUHF-FM
Houston. Among other features, this web site houses the transcripts for every
episode heard since the show's inception in 1988. Streaming audio is available
on each of the posted episodes.
The Accidental Scientist: The Science of Cooking
http://www.exploratorium.edu/cooking/
This site explores cooking as a science, from the challenge of
high-altitude baking to creating sculptures from table salt. “Here you'll find
recipes, activities, and Webcasts that will enhance your understanding of the
science behind food and cooking and may even make you a better cook!” The
first Webcast, The Science of Cooking Your Holiday Turkey, will be held
Wednesday, November 20, 2002. (From Librarian's Index to the Internet)
John Sulston, winner of the 2002 Nobel Prize in medicine, will speak about the race to sequence the genome in a lecture at 7 p.m. EST Thursday, Nov. 14 at the National Academy of Sciences building, 2100 C St. N.W., Washington, D.C. Sulston is the author of “The Common Thread: A Story of Science, Politics, Ethics and the Human Genome,” a new book from the National Academies' Joseph Henry Press. A reception and book signing will follow the lecture, which is open to the public and free of charge. (http://www4.nas.edu/nas/arts.nsf/(ByDocIDView)/BF515938FB806A7A85256C5500603070?OpenDocument)
The Grammy-nominated Eroica Trio performs at 3 p.m. EST Sunday, Nov. 17. The program, sponsored by the National Academies' Office of Exhibitions and Cultural Programs, features pieces from Beethoven, Loeillet and Arensky. The concert, which takes place at the National Academy of Sciences building, 2100 C St. N.W., Washington, D.C., is open to the public and free of charge. (http://www7.nationalacademies.org/arts/concert_schedule.html)
The Wayback Machine Officially Launches Document Comparison Tool
http://resourceshelf.freepint.com/archives/2002_11_01_resourceshelf_archive.html/#85643737
About two months ago, the VAS&ND ran a post about a beta of a page
comparison tool available on The Wayback Machine. Yesterday, Docucomp, the
developer of the software, announced that the Internet Archive has officially
licensed the software. From the announcement, “With the new DocuComp
capability, Wayback Machine visitors can instantly identify the differences
between any two historical web page versions in the website archive of more
than 10 billion pages.” Here's a quick example. 1) Go to the Advanced Wayback
Interface 2) Select the Comparison Box 3) Make Sure the “List All Pages That
Match Search Criteria” is Selected in the URL Matching Section 4) Enter a Web
Page URL in the Search Box (Example: A search and comparison of the AOL
Privacy Policy) 5) Check the Two Pages You Want to Compare (I've Selected
4/29/99 & 1/25/02), Click The “Compare Two Dates” Button 6) Your Results
Appear in A Matter of Seconds! Removed Text will be in Red, New Content in
Green. Link Directly To This VAS&ND Post posted by g price on Wednesday,
November 06, 2002 (From the Resource Shelf)
NLM Digital Library Grants
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/news/Internetgrants02.html
“The National Library of Medicine (NLM) announces 52 awards in its new
Internet Access to Digital Libraries (IADL) grant program. The purpose of the
IADL grants is to help health-related organizations provide consumers, health
professionals and health staff with access to digital health information
resources and information services of the highest quality. These projects will
use computers linked to the Internet to give access to published articles and
books, electronic health records, curriculum materials and scientific
knowledge bases.”
Electric Heart (from NOVA Online)
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/eheart/
One of many online resources at NOVA, this ebsite program tells the story
of the pursuit of a practical artificial heart. Here's what you'll find
online: 1) Map of the Human Heart: how the human heart works with an
automatically changing color graphic of a heart in cross-section; 2) Amazing
Heart Facts; 3) Artificial Human; 4) Pioneering Surgeon: O. H. Frazier: O. H.
Frazier has done more heart transplants than anyone else alive, well over 700.
He talks about his work, his thoughts, and his hopes; 5) Operation: Heart
Transplant: try your hand as a heart-transplant surgeon in this simplified
online procedure; 6) additional resources. (added 10/18/02, reviewed 10/18/02)
(From Blue Web'N)
Field Expeditions: Mozambique
http://www.worldwildlife.org/expeditions/mozambique/
Rich with tribal cultures, a diverse terrain, and wild animal life,
Mozambique is described as Africa's hidden jewel. Join a team of
conservationists from the World Wildlife Fund as they help establish new
national parks in the country, while battling illegal fishing and watching for
rampaging wildlife. Learn about the animals of the region, including
elephants, wild dogs, whales, dolphins, and dugongs -- sea cows that are
related to manatees. Watch video of coconut crabs and whale sharks, then read
the expedition's daily dispatches about everything from community development
to beekeeping to “no-go” zones. Ask the scientists about relations between
environmentalists and locals and how the new parks came into existence.
Finally, get the big picture with maps of the region. It's a fascinating
safari and important environmental lesson, all in one package. (From Yahoo's
Picks of the Week)
Plant Pathology Image of the Week
http://www.apsnet.org/online/archive.asp
Ever wonder what Ergot looks like? Or Cedar apple rust gall? At this site
you will not only find pictures of these plant diseases, but the pictures will
be breathtaking!
Build-A-Prairie
http://www.bellmuseum.org/distancelearning/prairie/build/
The prairie is one of North America's great ecosystems and a vital habitat
for many plants and animals. The prairie once spread across 1.5 million square
kilometers of the Great Plains! Today, only two percent of native prairie
remains. Build-A-Prairie is an interactive game which lets you restore the
prairie. In addition to the game, you have access to a Field Guide of prairie
plants, birds, insects, and mammals as well as Quicktime movies and VR
panoramas of prairies. Brought to you by Bell LIVE! 1999 and the University of
Minnesota. (added 10/25/02, reviewed 10/25/02) (From Blue Web'N)
Ergito
http://www.ergito.com/
(Free registration required)
This site-in-progress hopes to present an integrated approach to the
biological sciences at several levels. When complete, the site will contain
sections on biochemtistry, genetics, molecular biology, cell biology,
immunology, etc, each with the scope of a major text on the subject. The first
chapters of several modules are now available. In addition, there are several
new essays in the Great Experiments series, in which scientists write about
the significance of their discoveries. We are also about to introduce two new
series, dealing with Techniques and with Protein Structures. Some parts of the
site require a paid subscription, but there is a fair amount of interesting
free pages available, including a glossary, several of the book chapters, and
the Great Experiments series listed above.
An Atlas of Cyberspaces
http://www.cybergeography.org/atlas/atlas.html
“CyberGeography is the study of the spatial nature of computer
communications networks, particularly the Internet, the World-Wide Web and
other electronic 'places' that exist behind our computer screens, popularly
referred to as cyberspace.” The Atlas of Cyberspaces highlights many efforts
from around the world to visualize this type of information. Some of the
features have links to download software tools, like an experimental browser
that portrays Web sites as three dimensional buildings (the bigger the
building, the more popular it is). Other features are more abstract; one
project at Harvard University developed a visualization tool that depicts
users' online behavior. [CL] (From the Scout Report)
Kodak Digital Learning Center
http://www.kodak.com/US/en/digital/dlc/book3/chapter1/index.shtml
Digital Imaging
http://www.dpreview.com/learn/Glossary/Digital_Imaging/
HIPR2: Image Processing Learning Resources
http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/rbf/HIPR2/
Introduction to Metric Pattern Theory
http://www.cis.jhu.edu/education/introPatternTheory/
Journal of Electronic Imaging Online
http://spiedl.aip.org/eio/
Mathematics Experiences Through Image Processing (METIP)
http://www.cs.washington.edu/research/metip/metip.html
Philips: Making 3-D TV Possible
http://www.research.philips.com/technologies/display/3d/index.html
Technology Review: Holograms in Motion
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/freedman1102.asp
Applications for image processing exist in many of today's top
technologies. Embodying many elements from computer science and mathematics,
the science is used in digital cameras, photo editing tools, and much more.
The first site is an excellent introduction to digital imaging from the
Eastman Kodak Company (1). There are five lessons with review questions and
competency exams, covering fundamentals, image capture, and processing. A more
technical introduction is found at the Digital Imaging Glossary (2). This
educational resource has several short articles about compression algorithms
and specific imaging techniques. The Hypermedia Image Processing Reference (3)
goes into the theory of image processing. It describes operations involving
image arithmetic, blending multiple images, and feature detectors, to name a
few; and several of the sections have illustrative Java applets. The Center
for Imaging Science at John Hopkins University (4) offers two chapters from a
book on “metric pattern theory.” A brief overview of the material is provided
on the main page, and the chapters can be viewed on or offline with special
plug-ins given on the Web site. The Journal of Electronic Imaging (5) is a
quarterly publication with many papers on current research. The final issue of
2002 has a special section on Internet imaging that is quite interesting. A
research project at the University of Washington (6) focuses on the role of
mathematics in image processing. Besides a thorough description of the
project, there is free software and documentation given on the Web site.
Philips Research (7) is working on a product that seems like something from a
science fiction movie. Three dimensional television and the technologies that
make it possible are described on the site. Related to this is a November 2002
news article discussing holograms and 3-D video displays (8). The devices are
being studied by the Spatial Imaging Group at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology Media Lab. [CL] (From the Scout Report)
Top 500 Supercomputer sites
http://www.top500.org/lists/2002/11/
For the first time ever, 2 PC-based clusters were able to gain a top 10
spot. At position 5 is a cluster at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
built by Linux NetworX and Quadrics. At position 8 is a cluster at the
Forecast Systems Laboratory at NOAA built by HPTi with a Myrinet interconnect.
The new TOP500 list, as well as the former lists, can be found on the Web at
http://www.top500.org/.
Gaining entry into the top 10 positions on the new
list now requires achieving a Linpack performance of more than 3.2 Tflop/s.
Already 47 systems are reported to exceed Linpack performance of 1 Tflop/s.
Clearly, Teraflop-level systems are in widespread use now. The list is
compiled by Hans Meuer of the University of Mannheim, Germany, Erich
Strohmaier and Horst Simon of the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy
Research Scientific Computing Center at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
and Jack Dongarra of the University of Tennessee.
Invention at Play
http://www.inventionatplay.org/
Remember the halcyon days of finding shapes in clouds, doodling on paper,
creating cities from building blocks, and just letting your imagination run
free? That same childlike wonderment and imaginative play is what inspired
many past and present-day inventors. This Smithsonian exhibition invites you
to tinker around an invention playhouse and see if you can spur any creative
juices. In the case of Alexander Graham Bell, a few paper doodles were the
first imaginings of the indispensable telephone. Drug pioneer Gertrude Elion
likened her important experiments to playing with a jigsaw puzzle. Through the
inventors' stories, you may notice a running theme of recognizing the unusual,
borrowing from nature, and asking countless questions. You'll discover that
necessity is not always the mother of invention. Sometimes, you just have to
think like a kid. (From Yahoo's Picks of the Week)
History of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge
http://www.lib.washington.edu/specialcoll/tnb/
The Department of Special Collections at the University of Washington has
created an excellent online exhibit documenting the rise and (literal) fall of
the Tacoma Narrows bridge in Washington State, an event referred to as the
Pearl Harbor of engineering. The massive structure was built between 1938 and
1940 and, at the time of its completion, was the third longest suspension
bridge in the world. The bridge displayed some notable wavelike motions during
the final stages of construction, but no one was prepared for what happened on
November 7, 1940, when the entire structure began to buckle, and shortly
collapsed into the water below. Amazingly, the only fatality was a dog that
was trapped in one of the vehicles on the main span of the bridge. The online
exhibit documents this amazing event, with numerous photographs of the bridge
under construction, and most incredibly, dramatic shots of the bridge buckling
and its fall taken by several bystanders. This exhibit will be of particular
interest to engineers, particularly those working in the field of bridge
construction. [KMG] (From the Scout Report)
The Hypercar Concept
http://www.rmi.org/sitepages/pid386.php
The Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) introduces the Hypercar vehicle on this
Web site. Focusing on environmentally friendly operation, lightweight
construction, and streamlined, aerodynamic design, the Hypercar attempts to
maximize fuel efficiency. While it is still in the research and development
phase, RMI hopes to make it the dominant vehicle on the road by 2020. A great
deal of information is given on this site, addressing issues of safety and
performance, advanced composites, hydrogen fuel cells, and hybrid- electric
drivetrains. There are technical publications on different design aspects of
the Hypercar, as well as analyses of possible effects on different industries
resulting from the Hypercar's deployment. [CL] (From the Scout Report)
Housing In Earthquake Zones
http://www.world-housing.net/
Wondering about the kinds of houses are built in earthquake zones? The
Earthquake Engineering Research Institute (EERI) encyclopedia describes the
types of housing used in several different countries which are susceptible to
earthquakes.
To use this site you'll have to use IE, enable ActiveX, and have Shockwave player installed. The front page has a Shockwave world map. Click on an area of the map and that area comes into focus with a list of countries available. (Areas include Asia, North America, etc.) Click on a country and you'll get detailed information on it, including a hazard map (possibilities of earthquakes across that country), general country information (such as urban indicators and human settlement indicators) housing reports (available in PDF and HTML format) and a list of country specific links. The housing reports provide extensive information on housing types in the country, though each country varies on how many reports it has. India is a good country to look at -- a report on the bhonga, a traditional construction type of the Kutch district of Gujarat state in India, provides pictures and background on how such structures did during the 7.6 Bhuj earthquake in 2001. There are several other housing reports for India in addition to this one.
If you don't want to browse this site, you can also use the search engine to search by geographical area, building function, urban or rural construction, period of practice (how long that kind of building has been built), load bearing of structure, building materials, and other variables. (From Research Buzz)
Operational Significant Event Imagery (OSEI)
http://www.osei.noaa.gov/
Here are “high-resolution, detailed imagery of significant environmental
events which are visible in remotely-sensed data.” Satellite time lapse and
still images, often visually appealing, display major dust storms, fires,
floods, icebergs, ocean events, severe weather, snow, cyclones, hurricanes,
typhoons, volcanoes, and “Unique Imagery.” Includes current events and a daily
report (Monday through Friday). There are links to further information. (From
Librarian's Index to the Internet)
The Missoula Floods
http://www.opb.org/programs/ofg/episodes/1001/missoula/index.php
Overview of the cataclysmic Ice Age floods from glacial Lake Missoula that
defined the landscape of Oregon and Washington. Describes the formation of
this unique geology of channeled scabland, ripple marks, coulees, cataracts,
and the Columbia River gorge. Includes maps, glossary, and links. Companion
Web site to the Oregon Public Broadcasting documentary, Ice Age Flood. (From
Librarian's Index to the Internet)
California Coastal Records Project
http://www.californiacoastline.org/
This project “is intended to create a permanent record of the California
coastline as it is today” using digital color photography. Updated photographs
will reflect environmental changes, deterioration, and development. Photos are
taken from a helicopter. Click on the map, or enter coordinates of longitude
and latitude to search for a specific site. From environmental activists
Kenneth and Gabrielle Adelman. (From Librarian's Index to the Internet)
NASA's Origins Program
http://origins.jpl.nasa.gov/
NASA focuses its biggest telescopes on galaxies, stars, planets, and life
itself. The Origins Program addresses two defining scientific questions:
“Where do we come from?” and “Are we alone?” Using both ground-based
observatories and space-based missions like the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA
scans the skies. Scientists want to find out how galaxies and planets evolved
and created the right chemical conditions to support life on Earth. Knowing
how our own planet developed helps scientists pinpoint other planets capable
of sustaining life. For a look at planned spacecraft, check out the Origins
video. Learn about ultra-lightweight telescopes and other new technology being
developed for the project. The timeline of the universe gives a refresher
course on the Big Bang and what came after. If an extraterrestrial is out
there, the Origins Program may be the first to find it. (From Yahoo's Picks of
the Week)
Math for Elementary School Kids
http://www.teachrkids.com/
Teach R Kids Math is a Web site with a large assortment of interactive
lessons that demonstrate basic mathematical concepts. The material ranges from
basic counting for preschoolers to more advanced topics for elementary school
students. Online worksheets help children practice multiplication, division,
rounding, fractions, number sequences, and much more. Some of the activities
are timed, which allows the child to see his/her improvement. The site “has
been designed by children and adults,” making it especially tuned to the most
efficient ways of conveying information. This site is also reviewed in the
November 8, 2002 _NSDL MET Report_. [CL] (From the Scout Report)
Macalester College Problem of the Week
http://mathforum.org/wagon/
The Macalester College Problem of the Week (MacPOW) is a tradition that
began in 1968 as a fun, challenging activity for freshmen college students. It
continues to this day, and about 200 problems are archived on this Web site
(out of nearly 1,000 total). All of the unique conundrums are mathematically
oriented, and most are word problems that require visualization and critical
thinking skills. There is a mailing list to which users can subscribe and
receive solutions to each problem at the end of the week. However, because
MacPOW is maintained by a professor who regularly uses these problems in
class, solutions only remain on the site for the duration of each semester.
[CL] (From the Scout Report)
In Search of the Missing ... e
http://www.ngsc.k12.in.us/tickit/in_search_of_the_missing.htm
Just goes to show you that a regular teacher can create interesting
web-based content! This site is based on the standard webquest formula which
includes an Introduction, Task, Process, Resources, Evaluation, and
Conclusion. The premise: 'Captain Anti-Math' has stolen the number 'e' from
your hometown. Many local businesses cannot FUNCTION (as in mathematical
function). Using Resources provided, students must design an 'e'
problem/solution related to their chosen business. Each problem should be a
mathematical function or formula utilizing the number 'e'. The solution steps
must be clearly mathematically documented. The findings should be presented
using a professional looking visual aid (poster, graph, model, etc). (From
Blue Web'N.
Einstein
http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/einstein/
It's hard to think of him as anything other than a brilliant and quirky
genius. However, the man with the world's most famous brain faced personal
struggles just like everyone else. He grew up poor, wasn't the best of
students, and lived through an adulthood with a series of marriages and love
affairs gone sour. Despite his trials and tribulations, Einstein never
frittered away his powers of observation or his passion for unraveling
nature's ultimate secrets. The most famous equation ever, E=Mc^2, and his
breakthroughs on gravity, the speed of light, time, and special relativity all
came in his twenties while he clerked at a rather boring patent office in
Bern, Switzerland. Later in life, as Einstein realized the effect his atomic
research had on the outcome of WWII, his guilt led him to champion nuclear
disarmament the rest of his years. Einstein was not always at ease with his
celebrity, yet he used it to better humanity and show how intelligence isn't
just about an IQ, but choosing to live a productive life with no excuses.
(From Yahoo's Picks of the Week)
Illuminations
http://illuminations.nctm.org/
Designed to improve the teaching and learning of mathematics. Offers
interactive lessons for students, lesson plans for teachers, and math applets,
all arranged by grade level. Includes a large collection of Web resources,
arranged by concept and grade, and the standards for teaching math. From the
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM). (From Librarian's Index to
the Internet)
Leonids: Leonid Multi-Instrument Aircraft Campaign (Leonid MAC)
http://leonid.arc.nasa.gov/
Find news, scientific information, and technical images of Leonid meteor
showers and missions back to 1998. Offers brief biographies of scientists
helping on the current study, information on cooperating organizations, and
announcements of annual “storm watching parties.” Searchable. (From
Librarian's Index to the Internet)
The Zero Saga & Confusions with Numbers
http://ubmail.ubalt.edu/~harsham/zero/ZERO.HTM
This site explains the history, value of the concept, and symbol of zero,
and its role in mathematics. From a professor at the University of Baltimore.
(From Librarian's Index to the Internet)
Energy and Water for Sustainable Living : A Compendium of Energy and Water Success Stories
http://www.pi.energy.gov/library/ewsl.html
“Case studies of energy and technology applications demonstrate how
sustainable development can flourish in developing countries when principles
of good government are present.” The Compendium of Energy and Water Success
Stories was prepared by the U.S. Department of Energy, the Department of State
and Agency for International Development for the World Summit on Sustainable
Development, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2002. (From Infomine)
PBS: Borders Virtual Series
http://www.pbs.org/pov/borders/
Through video, audio, and text stories, this web-only series from PBS
explores the literal and metaphysical borders in our lives. A 10-week
interactive drama told through the eyes of three teenagers near the
U.S./Mexico border, Leaving Elsa uses the border between the countries as a
metaphor for the borders between childhood and adulthood. The snapshots
section is full of short digital meditations on the idea of borders -- some
snapshots are commissioned for the site, other are submitted by viewers like
you. Journey follows a family of migrant farm workers as they travel between
California and Texas and chronicles the struggles they feel. The site also
features weekly talks with writers, academics, and artists who chat about how
border issues affect their work and their lives. Links to webcams around the
world let you travel across borders yourself. Once again, PBS pushes the
borders of the proverbial envelope with this thought-provoking site. (From
Yahoo's Picks of the Week)
Justice Learning: Civic education in the real world
http://www.justicelearning.org/
Justice Learning is an innovative approach for engaging high school
students in informed political discourse. The web site uses audio from the
Justice Talking radio show and articles from The New York Times to teach
students about reasoned debate and the often-conflicting values inherent in
our democracy. The web site includes articles, editorials and oral debate from
the nation's finest journalists and advocates. All of the material is
supported by age-appropriate summaries and additional links. In addition, for
each covered issue, the site includes curricular material from The New York
Times Learning Network for high school teachers and detailed information about
how each of the institutions of democracy (the courts, the Congress, the
presidency, the press and the schools) affect the issue. Grade Level: Middle
School, High School, College (From Blue Web'N)
Ethnic Images in the Comics
http://lrrc3.sas.upenn.edu/popcult/cartoons/COMICS1.HTM
A collection of essays exploring representations (“both positive and
negative”) of Jewish, Chinese, Irish, and African-Americans in comics.
Includes bibliography. From the Balch Institute for Ethnic Studies,
Philadelphia. (From Librarian's Index to the Internet)
The Freud Museum of Vienna
http://www.freud-museum.at/e/index.html
“In 1925 the Hollywood film producer Samuel Goldwyn offered Freud $100,000
if he would collaborate on a love film...” Psychoanalysis may not be the box
office draw it once was, but anyone with an interest in Sigmund Freud or the
evolution of psychotherapy in the 20th century will want to explore this fine
offering from the Vienna-based Sigmund Freud Society. Visit the Media Library
to watch early film clips of the original celebrity shrink or listen to a 1938
London interview with Freud, who had just escaped Austria's Nazi regime. Other
features on the site include: a photo tour of Freud's apartment in the heart
of Vienna; images of the famous man's couch and his collection of antiquities;
and a profile of Anna Freud, his youngest child, herself a renowned
psychoanalyst and advocate for children. (From Yahoo's Picks of the Week)
National American Indian Heritage Month
http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/feature/indian/
“To promote awareness of and appreciation for the history and culture of
American Indians during National American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage
Month,” this National Park Service site presents monuments, buildings, and
other places associated with the prehistory and history of Native Americans.
(From Librarian's Index to the Internet)
Ethnic Images in Toys and Games
http://www.ferris.edu/news/jimcrow/links/toys/
A collection of essays exploring “ethnic stereotyping in toys and games.”
Includes a historical overview and information on the psychological aspects of
ethnic dolls, African-American imagery in games, and representations of Native
Americans in toys. From the Balch Institute for Ethnic Studies, Philadelphia.
(From Librarian's Index to the Internet)
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.)
DIGITAL ARCHIVE RECORDS DEFUNCT FEDERAL AGENCIES
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A56970-2002Oct20.html
The CyberCemetery is a
project at the University of North Texas (UNT), in Denton, to archive the Web
sites of defunct federal agencies, including the National Bankruptcy Review
Commission and the National Partnership for Reinventing Government, an
initiative of then-Vice President Al Gore. Several years ago, Congress ordered
the Government Printing Office (GPO) to shift its storage to more electronic
media, and Cathy Nelson Hartman of UNT suggested that colleges and
universities had the necessary computer resources to aid that effort. UNT paid
for the development of the CyberCemetary site
(http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/)
and pays for its maintenance. The GPO
identifies materials for archiving. So far, the site includes materials from
15 federal agencies and receives 20,000 to 30,000 visitors each month. The
National Partnership for Reinventing Government is the most visited agency at
the site.
Washington Post, 21 October 2002 via Edupage
RESEARCHERS WORK TO PRESERVE LANGUAGES
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,54345,00.html
Some have predicted that between 50
and 90 percent of the world's languages will disappear within the next hundred
years. An initiative called the Rosetta Project aims to create an archive of
more than 1,400 languages facing extinction. According to Doug Whalen, founder
of the Endangered Language Fund, no digital technology has “a ghost of a
chance of being taken as seriously archival” for the long term. The Rosetta
Project will use technology created by Los Alamos Laboratories and Norsam
Technologies that micro-etches text on a high-density storage disk. The disk
is expected to last for 2,000 years and can be read with a 1,000 power
microscope, ensuring that it will be useful and accessible for many future
generations. For each language, the disk will contain vocabulary lists,
grammar, numbering systems, and sample texts.
Wired News, 4 November 2002 via Edupage
TOUCH ACROSS THE OCEAN
http://chronicle.com/free/2002/10/2002103001t.htm
A demonstration organized for a meeting of
Internet2 showed how the sensation of touch can cross an ocean over high-speed
networks. Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and
University College London used haptic devices attached to a robotic arm and a
computer for the demonstration. One researcher in Boston and another in London
each held a stylus attached to a robotic arm, which they manipulated in tandem
to pick up a virtual box displayed on the computer screen. The same
researchers demonstrated haptic touch over a long-distance network in May.
Researchers at the University of Tokyo have conducted similar experiments
across the Pacific, but the technology remains primitive.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 30 October 2002 via Edupage
STUDY SHOWS WHO PREFERS DISTANCE EDUCATION
http://chronicle.com/free/2002/10/2002102102t.htm
A report from the U.S.
Department of Education confirms the notion that distance education appeals to
working parents, especially women, more than to other groups. The report is
based on a study of distance education during the 1999-2000 academic year. The
study data show that of women who took college courses, 8.5 percent did so
through distance education, versus 6.5 percent of men. Nine percent of college
students over 24 years old took distance courses, compared to 6 percent of
those under 24. The results confirm what many have noted: distance education
offers those with work and family responsibilities the flexibility to advance
their education when they are able.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 21 October 2002 via Edupage
NEW CENTER AT MIT TO BRIDGE ACADEMIA AND BUSINESS
http://www.wired.com/news/school/0,1383,55796,00.html
The Deshpande Center for
Technological Innovation opened this week at MIT to facilitate connections
between academic innovation and the commercial sector. Charles Cooney, a
professor at MIT, said a gap exists between nascent ideas and those which are
sufficiently developed to attract investors. The center is funded by a $20
million donation from Desh Deshpande, co-founder of Sycamore Networks, and his
wife, Jaishree. The center will award ignition grants, for projects at the
conceptual level, and innovation grants, for more mature projects that have
mapped out strategies for research and development. The center has already
awarded 9 grants, selected from 47 proposals, totaling $1.25 million.
Wired News, 17 October 2002 via Edupage
HEWLETT-PACKARD SPEARHEADS PROGRAM FOR USERS WITH DISABILITIES
http://www.fcw.com/geb/articles/2002/1028/web-library-10-29-02.asp
The Library
Technology Access (LTA) initiative, led by Hewlett-Packard, aims to increase
library computer accessibility for users with disabilities. The goal of the
program is to design “template” solutions that libraries can implement easily
to improve access for users with visual, hearing, mobility, or learning
disabilities. The first part of the initiative launched recently with
installations at several libraries around the nation. The workstations at the
test sites will record how users interact with the technology, providing data
that will be used to generate models of how assistive technology and
accessibility tools can best serve library patrons.
FCW.com, 29 October 2002 via Edupage
TECHNOLOGY CENTERS LEFT TO SUPPORT THEMSELVES
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/30/technology/30POWE.html
A national initiative
designed to provide community-based technology centers to bridge the digital
divide will end this week, leaving the nearly 1,000 centers to arrange their
own financing. The PowerUP program was started in 1999 by Stephen Case, then
chairman of America Online. A group of financial backers provided roughly $100
million for the project, but many of them have ended their support. According
to a spokesperson for PowerUP, the plan was always for the centers to become
self-sustaining and that this “seems like a natural transition time.” The Boys
and Girls Clubs of America, which operates 434 of the centers, will keep many
of them running. Others will be forced to find financial support. Supporters
of the centers say they are important resources in many communities that
otherwise would be unable to have such access. At least one critic said the
program's “top-down franchise” style of operation is a poor model for
community development.
New York Times, 30 October 2002 (registration req'd) via Edupage
WEB APPLICATION AIMS TO IDENTIFY EPIDEMICS
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,56546,00.html
A new Web-based application
created by Alan Zelicoff of Sandia National Labs aims to collect information
from doctors around the world in an effort to identify outbreaks of disease
much faster than current methods. According to Zelicoff, a former physician
who is now a researcher, disease reporting today is a slow, inefficient
process of disjointed efforts that “is exquisitely designed to fail.” Zelicoff
designed the Rapid Syndrome Validation Project (RSVP) to coordinate data about
reported symptoms, even before diagnosis, and to correlate those data
geographically. With RSVP, doctors enter information about patients' symptoms
using a touch screen. The application then reports those symptoms, without any
personal information about patients' identities, and seeks to identify
patterns. Sixteen hospitals in New Mexico and Texas recently installed RSVP,
and Zelicoff hopes it will be expanded to become a worldwide system.
Wired News, 25 November 2002 via Edupage.
FEDS CREATE DATA-GATHERING RESEARCH GROUP
The U.S. Department of Defense
has created the Information Awareness Office (IAO) and appointed John
Poindexter as its head. The new office, part of the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA), aims to develop systems that collect and share
information on a huge scale to combat terrorist threats. The IAO covers 13
programs, including Total Information Awareness, and Evidence Extraction and
Link Discovery. According to DARPA, the new office will work to develop
technological capabilities for the collaboration and sharing of information
across agency boundaries; real-time learning, pattern matching, and anomalous
pattern detection; and foreign-language machine translation and speech
recognition.
ComputerWorld, 25 November 2002 via Edupage.
JUDGE WARNS OF EXPANSION OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-966595.html
Speaking at a lecture
organized by the American Enterprise Institute and the Brookings Institution,
U.S. Appeals Court Judge Richard Posner warned of an “enormous expansion” of
intellectual-property law. Posner criticized a 1998 law extending the duration
of U.S. copyrights and attacked the Patent and Trademark Office for granting
what he called “very questionable” business method patents. Posner is known
for applying economic analysis to the law and for mediating settlement talks
in the Microsoft antitrust case.
CNET, 20 November 2002 via Edupage.
BUSH SIGNS LAW TO INCREASE CYBERSECURITY SPENDING
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47264-2002Nov27.html
President Bush signed the
Cyber Security Research and Development Act, allocating more than $900 million
to cybersecurity research over the next five years. The funding will support
National Science Foundation programs at colleges and universities and National
Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) grants promoting collaborative
research among universities and the private sector. Under the law, NIST will
also develop a security checklist for all federally purchased technology.
Reuters, 27 November 2002 via Edupage
NEW METHOD SLOWS SPREAD OF COMPUTER VIRUSES
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/2511961.stm
A researcher at Hewlett-Packard
Laboratories in Bristol, U.K., claims to have found a way to slow the spread
of computer viruses. Dr. Matthew Williamson said his method works by limiting
the number of connections at any one time from an infected computer, thus
slowing the spread of the virus and giving technicians time to spot and
eradicate it. Williamson's approach is novel in preventing viruses from
infecting other computers. He tested the theory on computers infected with the
Nimda virus, with the result that the rate of infection slowed dramatically.
Moreover, he observed that his method had a minimal impact on normal computer
use. Attackers could get around Williamson's method by writing slower viruses,
but doing so would give technicians more time to find and eliminate the
intruding code.
BBC, 26 November 2002 via Edupage
CALIFORNIA UNVEILS PLANS FOR OPTIPUTER
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/18/technology/18OPTI.html
The California Institute for
Telecommunications and Information Technology will use optical connections to
build a supercomputer in which communications lines are faster than the
processors -- the opposite of traditional supercomputing designs. The idea for
the new computer came from the San Diego Supercomputer Center, a research
partnership between the University of California at San Diego and the
University of California at Irvine. The “optiputer,” which will be located at
the University of California at San Diego, will initially consist of 500
processors connected with the optical router, which is a product of Chiaro
Networks in Richardson, Texas. The system is based on Intel processors running
the Linux operating system.
New York Times, 17 November 2002 via Edupage (registration req'd)
ENCRYPTION TECHNIQUE SAID TO BE UNBREAKABLE
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1104-965957.html
Researchers at Northwestern
University have developed a new form of quantum cryptography that sends
encrypted data at speeds of 250 megabits per second and is, according to the
reasearchers, unbreakable. Whereas other methods of quantum cryptography work
by sending individual photons, the new technique sends large bundles of
photons. According to Paul Kwiat, a professor of physics at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a leading authority on quantum cryptography,
the technique is extremely secure because “an eavesdropper can't tap into it
without disturbing the photons.” If the photons are disturbed, he said,
they're gone. Quantum technologies remain a long way from commercial use, but
some observers say cryptography could be the first of the quantum technologies
to enter real-world applications.
ZDNet, 15 November 2002 via Edupage.
PROFESSORS DESIGN ONLINE SCIENCE COURSE, INCLUDING LAB
http://chronicle.com/free/2002/11/2002111201t.htm
Two professors,
Doris R. Kimbrough of the University of Colorado at Denver and Jimmy Reeves of
the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, have created an online science
course that includes lab work that students do in their kitchens. According to
the professors, the lab work is safe and can be done with readily available
materials and a good-quality scale. Students in the online course are
reportedly able to gain an understanding of basic chemistry comparable to that
of in-class students. Each of the two institutions offers the course, though
at the University of North Carolina the class is entirely online, while the
University of Colorado version includes in-person lectures. Development of the
course was funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Education.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 12 November 2002 Via Edupage
Turkey Science on the Web
http://www.exploratorium.edu/cooking/
Explore the science of cooking your holiday turkey at a live Exploratorium
Webcast! Join us as chefs and scientists discuss how turkeys are raised and
examine the physical processes that turn your Thanksgiving dinner a delectable
golden brown. This is also an opportunity to share cooking tips and tricks!
It's all part of the first Webcast associated with our new Accidental
Scientist Web site. Log on to http://www.exploratorium.edu/cooking at 7 p.m.
on Wednesday, November 20, or join us at the Exploratorium in the Phyllis C.
Wattis Webcast Studio. See how a pinch of curiosity can improve your cooking!
2002 Best Inventions
http://www.time.com/time/2002/inventions/
If you ever wonder what your dog is thinking, you can now tap into his
inner canine with a nifty dog translator. And if you're tired of toting around
your mobile phone, use the ultra-cool tooth phone to answer your phone with a
tap of your canine tooth. These gadgets are just a couple of the best ideas of
2002 that wowed tech editors from “TIME”. Are household chores stressing you
out? Hire the Frisbee-like Roomba vacuum to do your dirty work while you bask
under chic color therapy lamps. For stylish alone time, pitch a Yurt-like
Icopod. Socially relevant innovations geared toward women include a date rape
drug spotter and the discreet birth control patch. Moving beyond everyday
life, some prototypes reach lofty heights -- a solar tower promises clean
energy, while a Martian rover tackle roads never traveled. For the just plain
cool, check out the solid and spectacular Aerogel and ultra-bubbles. (From
Yahoo's Picks of the Week)
All items from the Scout Report are copyright Susan Calcari, 1994-2002. 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.