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The Scout Report - July 11, 1997
The Scout Report
Volume 4, Number 11
July 11, 1997
A Publication of the Internet Scout Project
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
Addition to the Scout Toolkit
End User's Corner--July 1997
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/toolkit/enduser/
Scout Toolkit
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/toolkit/
A Quick Tour of Government Information Sites has been added to the End
User's Corner section of the Toolkit. Included are general pathfinders, US
Government sites, pointers to government documents, international
government information, state, county & local information, and numerical
databases, among other resources.
[JS]
[Back to Contents]
Research and Education
Biosphere 2 Center
http://www.bio2.edu/index.html
Biosphere 2 Center is a non-profit education and research organization
affiliated with Columbia University. This site contains two sections of
special interest to users: Sensor Data and Cyber Tour. Biosphere 2 provides
sensor data accessed from 750 sensors located in the desert and rain forest
regions of the biosphere to detect light, temperature, relative humidity
and carbon dioxide. Data is presented through graphs once a query is
specified. Cyber Tour allows viewers to visit the various regions of
Biosphere 2 including the ocean, savannah, thornscrub, and marsh in
addition to other regions. The management, research, and construction of
the regions are documented in detailed descriptions and illustrations.
[TB]
[Back to Contents]
Two Electronic Nature Journals
Pacific Discovery
http://www.calacademy.org/pacdis/
Our Planet
http://www.ourplanet.com/imgversn/planethme.html
The California Academy of Sciences has introduced a free online version of
its popular Pacific Discovery. This magazine has a fifty-year
tradition of award-winning journalism on the natural world. More recently,
"the magazine's focus has adjusted to encompass the causes and
ramifications of environmental degradation and the rapid decline in Earth's
biological diversity." Although most stories in Pacific Discovery are about
scientific subjects, all are readily accessible to the educated reader. The
site also features an index and archive of past articles. Our Planet is an
electronic version of the United Nations Environmental Program's bimonthly
print magazine. Each issue is dedicated to one specific theme which ties
into international conferences or involves current environmental issues.
The site also includes numerous back issues, a readers' forum, and a list
of annotated links.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
Writing Argumentative Essays
http://cougar.vut.edu.au/~dalbj/argueweb/contents.htm
Bill Daly of the Victoria University of Technology has posted a unit of
curriculum designed to teach students how to write short argumentative
essays. Originally created for students taking English in a vocational
school, it is also useful to upper level high school and university
educators and students. The site uses examples and models to systematically
guide users through the steps of writing an argumentative essay. Students
in any discipline that requires persuasive writing will benefit from this
well constructed lesson.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
Histos--The New Journal of Ancient
Historiography
http://www.dur.ac.uk/Classics/histos/index.html
The Department of Classics at the University of Durham (UK) has created
this new refereed electronic journal focusing on ancient historiographical
texts and media. Histos contains original articles as well as reviews,
discussions, reader responses, and notices of relevant conferences and
historiographical projects. Announcements of future articles and reviews
are also featured. The balance of textual and historiographical analysis in
this journal makes it equally useful to classicists and historians.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS)
http://www.census.gov/epcd/www/naics.html#final
The federal government has recently unveiled the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS), which will provide common industry
definitions for Canada, Mexico, and the US. NAICS replaces the older
Standard Industrial Classification System (SIC) in the US, where
implementation of NAICS will begin this year with the Census Bureau's 1997
Economic Census. This site provides the NAICS implementation time schedule,
NAICS and SIC comparability tables, and a number of issue papers and
concept reports relating to the new system. Most of these documents are
offered in either PDF or ASCII formats. While the site is probably most
useful to specialists, it does provide a thorough overview of this new
structure for comparing economic and financial statistics of the NAFTA
partners.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
Libsoft: Software for Librarians List
http://www.orst.edu/groups/libsoft/
A list focusing on software of particular interest to librarians has
recently been created. This site contains subscription information and list
archives. The list is unmoderated and open for anyone to discuss
"troubleshooting, bug reports and announcements of new products or releases
of existing products" of both OCLC and non-OCLC software, including
Cataloger's Desktop. This list does not address subjects relating to the
web, linux and particular OPACs.
[AG]
To subscribe send email to (leave subject line blank):
listserv@mail.orst.edu
In the body of the message type:
SUB libsoft your real name
[Back to Contents]
General Interest
Women's Health: A New York Times Special
Report
http://www.nytimes.com/women/
This new site, hosted by the New York Times, is a well-constructed
resource covering twenty-eight topics of health concern for women, "from
nutrition to cancer to cosmetic surgery." Included are reports from the
Times archive, materials from The Harvard Guide to Women's
Health and The New Our Bodies Ourselves, and a database of
additional related resources. The entire site is searchable and will remain
available until September 22. Please note that registration is required and
that it is free only to US residents.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
The Librarian's Guide to Cyberspace for Parents and
Kids
http://www.ssdesign.com/parentspage/greatsites/index.html
At its recent annual national conference, the American Library Association
(ALA) introduced The Librarian's Guide to Cyberspace for Parents and Kids,
a modest but helpful guide for parents and their children who are
relatively new to the Internet. The site is geared mostly towards helping
parents find the best web resources for their children. It provides parents
with definitions of common Internet terms, safety tips, and guidelines for
selecting quality sites. The ALA gives parents a head start in this last
category with a list of fifty fun and useful links that everyone in the
family can enjoy.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
Department of Transportation's Domestic Airline Fares
Consumer Report [PDF or Microsoft Word]
http://www.dot.gov/ost/aviation/
For the first time, the Department of Transportation has released a
quarterly Air Travel Consumer Fare Report. This report provides information
on the average prices paid in the third quarter of 1996 by consumers in the
the 1000 largest domestic city-pair markets within the 48 contiguous
states. For each city-pair market, the report identifies the dominant
airline and its average one-way fare, the carrier with the lowest average
fare, and the overall average fare paid by all passengers.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
Framework for Global Electronic Commerce
http://www.whitehouse.gov/WH/New/Commerce/
INET '97 Proceedings
http://www.isoc.org/conferences/index.html
On July 1 the White House released its Framework for Global Electronic
Commerce, developed by an intraagency working group under Vice President Al
Gore's supervision. This framework outlines the administration's positions
on a number of key issues related to electronic commerce. This site offers
the text of the framework, an executive summary of its contents, and a
Presidential Message to internet users. One of the key players in the
creation of this document was Ira Magaziner, senior policy advisor to
President Clinton and the keynote speaker at INET '97, the seventh annual
meeting of the Internet Society. INET '97 focused on some of the legal,
ethical, and regulatory issues surrounding the use of Internet technology
and this site allows users to view the text of these proceedings.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
Best Beaches in the USA
http://www.petrix.com/beaches/
Dr. Stephen Leatherman, professor and director of the Laboratory for
Coastal Research at the University of Maryland, College Park, has released
his annual list of America's best beaches. "Dr. Beach" considered fifty
different factors, including current, wave size, smell, views and vistas,
and intensity of beach use, to rate the twenty finest public beaches of 650
nation wide. This site features photos of the winners, a complete list of
the Beach Rating Scale Criteria, and Dr. Leatherman's selections for the
five best Walking, Wild, and Romantic Beaches.
[MD]
[Back to Contents]
Network Tools
Introduction to Java--A Free Online
Course
http://www.ibm.com/java/education/intro/home.htm
Introduction to Java is an absolutely free online course provided by IBM.
This audio/video-based course has a number of system requirements which
include: minimum 486 66MHz processor, Soundcard or Mwave card, minimum 28.8
modem for audio/video version and 14.4 modem for audio only version,
minimum monitor resolution of 800 x 600, and finally Windows 95/NT or OS/2
4.0 with Netscape Navigator 2.0 or higher. The Bamba audio/video plug-in is
also required but downloads are available. Although Bamba, a streaming tool
that combines video/satellite and the Web, and the course are in the
experimental stage, users can benefit from this informative, cutting-edge
site.
[TB]
[Back to Contents]
HTML 4.0 Specification--Public Working
Draft
http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-html40-970708/cover.html
Table of contents:
http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-html40-970708/contents.html
Press release:
http://www.w3.org/Press/HTML4
World Wide Web Consortium
http://www.w3.org/
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) recently released to the public a
working draft of the latest version of HyperText Markup Language (HTML).
HTML 4.0 improvements include interoperability, internationalization,
accessibility, table enhancements, compound documents, cascading style
sheet support, scripting, and printing. Text direction and language of
content attributes are featured in this new version. The specification
includes a detailed HTML 4.0 reference manual, two indexes to elements and
attributes, an appendix containing changes from HTML 3.2 (discus
sed in the May 31, 1996 Scout Report), and notes on performance and
implementation. Users need to keep in mind that this is a working document
and the draft may change before being ratified as a W3C recommendation.
[AG]
[Back to Contents]
Where Are They Now
Volume 1, Number 11: The Scout Report for July 8,
1994
http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report/archive/7-8-94.html
Computer-Mediated Communication Magazine
http://www.december.com/cmc/mag/
December Communications, Inc.
http://www.december.com/
The July 8, 1994 Scout Report annotated a new issue of what was at that
time a novel phenomenon, a webzine that began publication in May of 1994.
John December's CMC, which "reports about people, events,
technology, public policy, culture, practices, study, and applications
related to human communication and interaction in online environments," is
one of the longest-running and best-known publications of its type. All
issues of this monthly publication are available. December Communications
is highlighted by its Popular Webs section, selected annotated pointers to
Internet resources in many subjects. There are few Internauts who know more
about the Internet, or who are more deeply versed in its culture, than John
December.
[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
-
Jeannine Ramsey -- Production Editor
-
Teri Boomsma -- Contributor
-
Michael de Nie -- Contributor
-
Aimee D. Glassel -- Contributor
-
Matthew Livesey -- Contributor
-
Amy Tracy Wells -- Contributor
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© 1997 Internet Scout Project
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