Subject: The Scout Report -- June 20, 1997 -- HTML Version
Sent: 20/6/97 08:59 pm
Received: 20/6/97 11:03 pm
From: Scout Project, scout@CS.WISC.EDU
Reply-To: The Scout Report (HTML Version), SCOUT-REPORT-HTML@internic.net
To: SCOUT-REPORT-HTML@LISTS.INTERNIC.NET
The Scout Report - June 20, 1997
The Scout Report
Volume 4, Number 8
June 20, 1997
A Publication of Internet Scout Services
Computer Science Department, University of Wisconsin
A Project of the InterNIC
The Scout Report is a weekly publication offering a selection of new and
newly discovered Internet resources of interest to researchers and
educators, the InterNIC's primary audience. However, everyone is welcome to
subscribe to one of the mailing lists (plain text or HTML). Subscription
instructions are included at the end of each report.
An
Acrobat .pdf version of this report is available for printing and
distributing locally. For information on Adobe Acrobat Reader, visit the Adobe site.
Visit the Scout Report web page at:
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/
Send comments and contributions to:
scout@internic.net
In This Issue:
New From Internet Scout
Internet Scout Wins 3-year NSF Grant
Continuation
It's now official--the National Science Foundation has extended the
Internet Scout Project for three years with a $3 million grant, allowing us
to continue to help educators and students "surf smarter, not longer." From
our base in the Computer Sciences Department at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, and with ongoing support from the InterNIC, the Scout
project will be able to expand into new areas as well as continue to
provide our existing services. The new NSF funding not only ensures
continued publication of the Scout Report, Net-happenings, the KIDS Report,
and the Scout Toolkit, but also the establishment of new services such as
subject-specific Scout Reports for science and engineering, social science,
and business and economics. Watch for announcements of these new services
in coming months. As the higher education community moves into the
Internet2 and the Next Generation Internet initiatives, the Internet Scout
Project will be actively involved in researching and developing new ways to
locate valuable and credible information on the Internet.
[SC]
[Back to Contents]
Scout Report Signpost
http://www.signpost.org/signpost/index.html
The Scout Report is now over three years old, and the collection of highly
selective resources we've developed is three years strong! To give our
readers improved access to this valuable archive we have developed an
entirely new interface called the Scout Report Signpost. Signpost offers
multiple methods of browsing (by subject) or searching the annotations that
have appeared in the Scout Report. It provides browsing by Library of
Congress Classification or Subject Headings and searching via both a Quick
Search (full-text) and Advanced Search (fielded) interface, which use
natural language querying. The Internet Scout cataloging group has applied
both established and emerging standards such as AACR2 (Anglo-American
Cataloguing Rules) and the Dublin Core, a schema for resource description.
At this time approximately 425 annotations have been fully cataloged and
are available for browsing or for searching through the Advanced Search
utility. The Quick Search utility offers access to the entire
2200-annotation archive. Work will continue until all archived annotations
are catalogued. Try out Signpost--and be sure to let us know what you think.
[ATW]
[Back to Contents]
Research and Education
International Database Population Pyramids--US Census
Bureau
http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idbpyr.html
The Census Bureau's IDB database (discuss
ed in the May 16, 1997 issue of the Scout Report) has added a graphical
enhancement that turns raw numbers into meaningful trends almost instantly.
Population Pyramids allows users to view population pyramids (horizontal
bar graphs going in opposite directions for male and female populations)
for over 200 countries. Graphs are available for summary years (1997, and
projections for 2025 and 2050), or any selected year or group of years
between as early as 1950 and as late as 2050 (availability depends on the
country). But the real eye-opener is the "dynamic output" function that
rapidly replaces one year's pyramid with the next for the whole time
series, allowing researchers to see a "movie" of the trend of the
population pyramid. For many countries, this resource will be more valuable
as a tool of population projection than population history, and users
should note that raw number scales are used.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Elsevier Trends Journals Technical Tips
Online
http://tto.trends.com/
Technical Tips Online is an outgrowth of the technical tips section of
Elsevier's Trends in Genetics. Freely available (after
registration), its collection of peer-reviewed articles is designed to be
"a unique molecular biology techniques resource." Articles can be browsed
by eight categories including Polymerase Chain Reaction, Tissue Culture,
Electrophoresis, and Cloning & Sequencing. Searching by full text, keyword,
author, and category is also available, with hyperlinked inverted author
and keyword indexes provided. Readers may comment on articles and these
comments are made available at the site. There is also a section on press
releases for new products.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Worldwide Books Exhibition Catalogs and Other Books on
Art
http://www.worldwide.com/
Worldwide Books provides this searchable and browsable database of over
"35,000 titles on art, architecture and photography systematically selected
by Worldwide Books over the past three decades for [its] library clients,"
including "international museum and gallery catalogues published from the
1960s to the present," (about 30,000) and "American trade and university
press art books published since 1992" (about 3,000). Two search interfaces
allow for specific searching or for creating specialized lists of items
based on a combination of eight different variables including geography,
chronology, country of publication (for catalogs only), medium, and style.
Browsing is available via an alphabetic artist index of over 6,000 names.
Although the database is designed to aid in the purchase of books from
Worldwide (which carries about 18,000 of the titles in stock), its flexible
and powerful search options make it a marvelous bibliographic database.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Library Journal Digital
http://www.ljdigital.com/
Founded in 1876, Library Journal has brought a new "look & feel" to
its digital version. Items in this e-zine include LJ's Hot Picks, News
(divided into This Week, People and Calendar), View, Infotech (which covers
industry news), Multimedia (covering the web, CD-ROMs, audiobooks and
video), BestSellers and Job Search. This site contains a fair amount of
coverage and is well organized; at no point will the reader feel lost.
Missing from this site is Library Hotline, which in the printed version
often provides the best tidbits.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Science Education Gateway--SII
http://www.cea.berkeley.edu/Education/SII/SEGway/
No-frames version:
http://www.cea.berkeley.edu/Education/SII/SEGway/seg_noframes.html
For access to lesson plans and resources from some of the best science
museums in the US, teachers can enter the Science Education Gateway. Dubbed
"the public user interface of the Science Information Infrastructure," the
Science Education Gateway is a collection of links to lesson plans and K-12
educational resources in the physical sciences. The site is provided by
five web museums, including the Exploratorium (discus
sed in the February 21, 1997 issue of the Scout Report), the Lawrence
Hall of Science, and the Center for Earth and Planetary Studies
(Smithsonian Institution). Topics covered include Space Science, Light,
Cycles, Sun & Earth, Weather, and Solar System. Each section contains
briefly annotated lesson plan links (including grade levels and source), a
"grab bag" of related resources, and lesson plan templates.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Law-Related Listservs--Regent University Law
Library
http://www.regent.edu/lawlib/lists/list-law.html
Regent University Law Library's Margaret L. Christiansen provides this
no-nonsense resource of nearly 300 legal mailing lists and email
newsletters. The list can be browsed by major topic (Practitioner, Law
School, Areas of Practice, and Miscellaneous), with several subtopics under
each, or alphabetically. Each entry may contain descriptions and identify
list maintainers/moderators, as well as provide subscription information.
General mailing list and netiquette background is also provided.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
General Interest
Two GAO Reports on US Government Electronic Information
Dissemination
GGD-97-86: Internet and Electronic Dial-Up Bulletin Boards: Information
Reported by Federal Organizations [.pdf, 44 p.]
GGD-97-86S: World Wide Web Sites: Reported by 42 Federal
Organizations [.pdf, 183 p.]
Available at: GAO Recently Issued Reports
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/newtitle.htm
Archived at:
http://www.gao.gov/AIndexFY97/divisions/gglist.htm
GPO Access GAO Reports
http://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/aces/aces160.shtml
The US General Accounting Office has released two reports that should be
very useful to researchers, journalists, policy makers, librarians, and
anyone in the general public interested in accessing US government
information electronically. Internet and Electronic Dial-Up Bulletin
Boards concentrates on an accounting of federal BBS and Internet
expenditures, but contains an eight page section listing names and BBS
numbers of federal agencies. The supplement to the report, World Wide
Web Sites, contains a detailed, Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) hyperlinked
listing of about 4,300 web sites reported by 42 federal organizations. The
sites are arranged by organization. Users can link from the table of
contents to the site listings, and then click on URLs to link to the
sites--if their version of the Acrobat Reader is WebLink enabled. Even
though the rapid evolution of the web may already have made some of these
sites obsolete (sites were collected between November 1996 and April 1997),
many users will find this detailed compendium to be an invaluable resource.
Note that both reports can be found under the Recently Issued Reports
section of the GAO Reports and Testimony page at present. In the future,
they will be retrievable from the General Accounting Office section of the
Government Printing Office Access GPO site by searching on the report
numbers. At that time, the reports should be available in ASCII text as
well as .pdf format.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Watergate 25--Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/splash1a.htm
Less graphical entrance:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/front.htm
The Washington Post commemorates the twenty-fifth anniversary of its
most famous story with a site featuring a timeline of the Watergate scandal
that contains links to full text selections of original articles. It also
offers short biographies of the twenty key players in the Nixon
administration and the investigation, some speculations on the true
identity of the still unidentified informer "Deep Throat," and selected
memories from Post staffers. A summary of post-Watergate reforms
details their lasting impact and provides links to stories on current
political scandals.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
How Things Work--Physics in Everyday Life
http://www.phys.virginia.edu/Education/Teaching/HowThingsWork/
If you've ever wondered how a neon light works, how food cooks, or why dust
settles on the moving blades of a fan, this is an excellent place to find
out. Professor Louis Bloomfield of the University of Virginia Physics
Department urges users to "think of this site as a radio call-in program
that's being held on the WWW instead of the radio." Users email questions
about how things work and he answers them. A browsable and searchable list
of answered questions is arranged (in nineteen major chapters, from The
Laws of Motion to Resonance to Light) in accordance with a companion book
HOW THINGS WORK: The Physics of Everyday Life. Note that at times
the question box may be full.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
AfricaNews Online
http://www.africanews.org/
AfricaNews Online, provided by Africa News Service, is a good place to
start for those interested in current events in Africa. It is anchored by
dispatches from the Panafrican News Agency (PANA), but also includes
stories from other African sources such as All Africa Press Service, the
Johannesburg Mail and Guardian, and the Post of Zambia, among
others. PANA has its own section on the site, consisting of daily
headlines, sports news, and weekly economic, science, environmental and
health news. As might be expected from news service dispatches, most
stories are short and informational rather than detailed or analytical.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
WNBA.com--Women's NBA
http://www.wnba.com/
The Women's National Basketball Association tips off its inaugural season
on June 21, 1997 and offers interested Internauts a chance to learn about
the league on the WNBA site. The site is highlighted by pages for each of
the eight teams, including schedules, rosters with player information,
arena and ticket information, and a "theater" section with QuickTime and
.avi movies of selected players in action. The main page also contains
information about the league, including its executives, and a complete
rulebook. The 28-game schedule runs through August and broadcast
information is listed in the schedule.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Network Tools
Two Search Resources
Search Engine Watch
http://www.searchenginewatch.com
"Just the Answers Please: Choosing a Web Search Service"--Searcher
Magazine
http://www.infotoday.com/searcher/may/story3.htm
Danny Sullivan of Calafia Consulting provides Search Engine Watch, a
resource designed to provide information to two distinct groups of users:
web professionals (commercial webmasters, site designers and promoters),
and web searchers. The Webmaster's Guide to Search Engines contains
information on search engine design, ranking, and tips on how to make sure
your site receives a high relevance rating. Search Engine Facts and Fun
contains information on the major search services and links to selected
search engine tutorials and ratings articles, among other features. "Just
the Answers Please" is a detailed comparison of six web search engines
written by Susan Feldman of Datasearch that appeared in the May 1997 issue
of Searcher Magazine. At its heart are evaluated results of seven
sample searches on topics such as comparative reviews of new cars, Europe's
Internet access infrastructure, company home pages, and tennis elbow.
Feldman provides tips and techniques as well as a detailed search engine
feature sheet.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
AOLpress--A WYSIWYG HTML editor
http://www.aolpress.com/press/
AOLpress, provided by America Online Inc., is a free WYSIWYG HTML editor
for Macintosh, Windows 3.1/95/NT, and Unix. AOLpress is a very effective
and easy-to-use editing tool; editing can be done in WYSIWYG mode or HTML
mode. A MiniWeb feature, which functions as a simple site manager, is also
included. Existing HTML files can be easily imported into MiniWeb
relatively accurately using a process called "Webizing." The editor also
supports auto-creation of tables, frames, lists, and various other page
attributes with the click of a button. Pages can be published directly to
non-AOL servers if they support the HTTP PUT protocol.
[TB]
[Back to Contents]
Where Are They Now
Volume 1, Number 8: The Scout Report for June 17,
1994
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/archive/6-17-94.html
The Strasbourg Astronomical Data Center (CDS)
http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/CDS.html
When the Strasbourg Astronomical Data Center was annotated, it was noted
for providing journal tables of contents and abstracts, searchable
databases, and the AstroWeb meta-site of astronomical resources, among
other features. These services are all still available at one of the
earliest astronomical meta-sites. In recent months CDS has added a web
interface to its Simbad (Set of Identifications Measurements and
Bibliography for Astronomical Data) database of "about 1 million objects,
for which 3.3 million identifiers, more than 1.5 million observational
measurements and 1.4 million bibliographical references are available"
(registration required, and the service is fee-based for some users). CDS
users will soon have access to the Hipparcos and Tycho catalogs as well.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Copyright Susan Calcari, 1994-1997. 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.
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in
this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect
the views of the University of Wisconsin - Madison, the National Science
Foundation, AT&T, or Network Solutions, Inc.
The Scout Report (ISSN 1092-3861) is published weekly by Internet
Scout
-
Susan Calcari -- Managing Editor
-
Jack Solock -- Editor
-
Matthew Livesey -- Production Editor
-
Teri Boomsma -- Contributor
-
Aimee D. Glassel -- Contributor
-
Amy Tracy Wells -- Contributor
-
-
Michael de Nie -- Contributor
Scout Report and Scout Report HTML Subscription Instructions
- To receive the electronic mail version of the Scout Report each
week, join the scout-report mailing list. This is the only mail you will
receive from this list.
send email to:
listserv@lists.internic.net
in the body of the message, type:
subscribe scout-report yourfirstname yourlastname
For example, if your name is Frasier Crane, type:
subscribe scout-report Frasier Crane
If your name is not Frasier Crane, substitute your own name.
- To unsubscribe from the scout-report list, send email to:
listserv@lists.internic.net
in the body of the message, type:
unsubscribe scout-report
Do not type your name when unsubscribing.
- To receive the Scout Report in HTML format for local viewing and
posting, subscribe to the scout-report-html mailing list, used exclusively
to distribute the Scout Report in HTML format once a week.
send email to:
listserv@lists.internic.net
in the body of the message, type:
subscribe scout-report-html yourfirstname yourlastname
For example, if your name is Frasier Crane, type:
subscribe scout-report-html Frasier Crane.
If your name is not Frasier Crane, substitute your own name.
- To unsubscribe from the scout-report-html list, send email to:
listserv@lists.internic.net
in the body of the message, type:
unsubscribe scout-report-html
Do not type your name when unsubscribing.
The Scout Report's Web page:
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/
http://rs.internic.net/scout/report/
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/
Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) versions of the Scout Report:
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/pdf/
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/pdf/
Scout Report by gopher:
g
opher://ds0.internic.net:70/11/pub/list_archives/scout-report.archive
go
pher to: ds0.internic.net
select: Internet Directory and Database Services/InterNIC Database Services
/Mailing Lists Archives/scout-report.archive
FTP archive of past Scout Reports:
ftp://ftp.ds.internic.net/pub/list_archives/scout-report.archive/
[Back to Contents]
Comments, Suggestions, Feedback
scout@internic.net
© 1997 Internet Scout Project
InterNIC Information & Education Services