Via Hitwise Intelligence, updated search engine statistics:Google 78% (+3%)
Yahoo 9% (+13%)
MSN Search 6% (-25%)
Ask.com 5% (-2%)
Via Hitwise Intelligence, updated search engine statistics:
A man was taken to hospital after suffering a severe allergic reaction when he was bitten by a hamster.
Darlene Fichter (via Brian Kelly):Many of the high school students I know, for example, are always "on" so real-time communication tools fit their lifestyle best ... students use email less ... University direct "email" is no longer an effective channel. I suspect that institutional email is seen as a form of spam … intrusive and not important. The real email action is happening on a non-University account.
On Brian Kelly's blog UK Web Focus, John Kirriemuir commented "Something is going on with Facebook".
Over the past few weeks I've found that I've had to unsubscribe from several of the tech blogs I used to read. Information overload, pressure of time, and they just weren't delivering the goods often enough. But Download Squad is a blog I discovered relatively recently which is definitely worth reading. The latest reason why is their post on the new Facebook API toys, which I was vaguely aware of but hadn't explored before (even if the tools are disappointing, to say the least).
Are a few more shows going to be added to turn this into a fully blown channel? And is there any OpenLearn content we can mix in?When you scratch the surface of YouTube, there isn't any more quality on-topic material which can be added to this show (these animations are expensive to produce), so I used what's there and made:
Just when I feel I've got my head around SplashCast (see previous post), comes H2O (via Tony Hirst).
Google is to ban adverts for essay-writing firms that target university students who are prepared to pay other people to do their coursework. Good for Google, and good PR, but the ban only applies to paid adverts so it will still be possible to find the sites through search, or as S. pointed out, by following the link to essaywriter.co.uk that the BBC was dumb enough to include on its page.
Update3: Panorama: Bad Science.
Researching open content in education
Update: Facebook Visits up 106% Since Opening Up in September
Coral reefs are hot at the moment. Steve Jones is into coral, and Dave Winer (the most original thinker online at present?) says RSS is a coral ecosystem.We have used 19.9 million papers over 5 decades and 2.1 million patents to demonstrate that teams increasingly dominate solo authors in the production of knowledge. Research is increasingly done in teams across nearly all fields. Teams typically produce more frequently cited research than individuals do, and this advantage has been increasing over time. Teams now also produce the exceptionally high-impact research, even where that distinction was once the domain of solo authors. These results are detailed for sciences and engineering, social sciences, arts and humanities, and patents, suggesting that the process of knowledge creation has fundamentally changed.
Enter your best students for the 2007 SET (Science, Engineering & Technology Student of the Year) Awards. Entry costs nothing, and if your student is shortlisted it could lead to wide recognition and publicity for your teaching and your university. The SET Awards are the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland’s most important and prestigious national awards for undergraduates.
When I was a kid I was a compulsive reader. This public library was my second home. They used to run "The Good Readers Club" - read a book, answer a set of questions, get points. No money, just endless points. I used to bug the librarians by taking out the maximum three books, taking them home and reading them, then going back the same day.
What's the difference between glanceability and dumbing down?
Interesting online music developments are appearing. Splashcast hijacks podcasters RSS feeds, Adam Curry strikes back (ho ho ho - PodShow, Schadenfruede - need I say more?).
Academics working in UK have the highest pay scales compared to colleagues in other Commonwealth countries, but British academics drop to third place when a cost of living factor is applied to income, and their place at the top is taken by Australian academics.Stumbling on Happiness, Daniel Gilbert Psychologist Daniel Gilbert reveals how and why the majority of us have no idea how to make ourselves happy. The drive for happiness is one of the most instinctive and fundamental human impulses. In this revealing and witty investigation, psychologist Daniel Gilbert uses scientific research, philosophy and real-life case studies to illustrate how our basic drive to satisfy our desires can not only be misguided, but also intrinsically linked to some long-standing and contentious questions about human nature. |
Homo britannicus, Chris Stringer Homo britannicus tells the epic story of the human colonisation of Britain, from our very first footsteps to the present day. Drawing on all the latest evidence and techniques of investigation, Chris Stringer describes times when Britain was so tropical that humans lived alongside hippos and sabre tooth tigers; and times so cold they shared the land with reindeer and mammoth; and times colder still when humans were forced to flee altogether. |
In Search of Memory, Eric R Kandel Nobel laureate Eric R Kandel charts the intellectual history of the emerging biology of the mind, and sheds light on how behavioural psychology, cognitive psychology, neuroscience and molecular biology have converged into a powerful new science. These efforts, he says, provide insights into normal mental functioning and disease, and simultaneously open pathways to more effective treatments. |
Lonesome George, Henry Nicholls (my personal favourite) Lonesome George is a 1.5m-long, 90kg tortoise aged between 60 and 200, and it is thought he is the sole survivor of his sub-species. Scientific ingenuity may conjure up a way of reproducing him, and resurrecting his species. Henry Nicholls details the efforts of conservationists to preserve the Galapagos' unique biodiversity and illustrates how their experiences and discoveries are echoed worldwide. He explores the controversies raging over which mates are most appropriate for George and the risks of releasing crossbreed offspring into the wild. |
One in Three, Adam Wishart When his father was diagnosed with cancer, Adam Wishart couldn't find any book that answered his questions: what was the disease, how did it take hold and what did it mean? What is it about cancer's biology that means it has not been eradicated? How close are we, really, to a cure? There was no such book. So he wrote it. One in Three interweaves two powerful stories: that of Adam and his father; and of the 200-year search for a cure. |
The Rough Guide to Climate Change, Robert Henson Robert Henson has written this guide to a pressing issue facing the world. The guide looks at visible symptoms of change on a warming planet, how climate change works, the evolution of our atmosphere over the last 4.5 billion years and what computer simulations of climate reveal about our past, present, and future. It looks at the sceptics' grounds for disagreement, global warming in the media and what governments and scientists are doing to try to solve the problem. |
Hype about Web 2.0 is making firms neglect the basics of good design, say web usability guru Jakob Nielsen."Don’t try and do something new on your website, because you are not important enough"
In a thoughtful essay in the Education Guardian, David Puttnam, chair of education charity Futurelab, notes that children quick to grasp the joys of new technology and asks why are schools lagging so far behind?At a recent digital education conference in San Francisco, one of the more memorable remarks quoted came from a child: "Whenever I go into class, I have to power down." That roughly translates as: "What I do with digital technology outside school - at home, in my own free time - is on a completely different level to what I'm able to do at school. Outside school, I'm using much more advanced skills, doing many more interesting things, operating in a far more sophisticated way. School takes little notice of this and seems not to care."
Thanks to Seb Schmoller for the heads up about WizIQ.
A new Google gadget downloads RSS feeds from any website, reads them using text-to-speech and shows the feeds on screen. After installation the program will use the computer's default voice, although there are many high quality voices across multiple languages that can be used with the gadget (they must be SAPI 5 compatible).
Learning and Teaching in the Sciences: practical tips and advice from recognised experts
I did consider blogging about the latest Patrick Moore story, but one way and another it passed me by so I decided to let it go.
Thanks to Ewan McIntosh for the heads up, I checked out FauxTo. On a 2Mb broadband link it was reasonably fast and it has an impressive featureset, but since I have my own copy of Photoshop, I won't be switching. Still a useful site if you don't have access to Photoshop, or you object to the silly money Macromedia is asking for CS3.
Don't blame me - it's the BBC's headline. According to the UK Graduate Careers Survey of 17,000 final year students, arts and humanities students are much less likely to have made plans for working after university and expect less well-paid jobs. Students on courses such as law, business, information technology and engineering had strong expectations of stepping from university into well-paid jobs. The media sector remains the most sought after in terms of career aspirations, with applications from 13.4% of students. This is followed by teaching, investment banking, marketing and accountancy.
The implicit lesson is unmistakable: Knowing is something done by individuals. It is something that happens inside of your brain. The mark of knowing is being able to fill in a paper with the right answers. Knowledge could not get any less social. In fact, in those circumstances when knowledge is social we call it cheating.
Nor could the disconnect get much wider between the official state view of education and how our children are learning. In most American households, the computer on which students do their homework is likely to be connected to the Net. Even if their teachers let them use only approved sources on the Web, chances are good that any particular student, including your son or daughter, has four or five instant messaging sessions open as he or she does homework. They have their friends with them as they learn…
One thing is for sure: When our kids become teachers, they’re not going to be administering tests to students sitting in a neat grid of separated desks with the shades down.
Lorrelle at WordPress has asked to hear from disabled blog readers ways in which the challenge of reading blogs and surfing the web can be reduced.
Part of my plan to reduce my carbon footprint involves limiting my driving as much as possible, so I haven't been in any hurry to get a GPS SatNav for my car. Last weekend someone lent me a TomTom unit for a long trip, and I was surprised at how well it performed, exceeding my expectations. So I treated myself to one of my own, and spent yesterday evening playing with it.
Brian Kelly has posted both the text and the background to a paper on “Accessibility 2.0: People, Policies and Processes” which will be presented at the W4A conference in Banff, Canada on 7-8th May 2007 (the conference runs in parallel with the International WWW 2007 conference). You can read his post here and the text of the paper here.
Andy Black's latest post has shamed me into pointing at my public Bloglines feeds once again:My students accuse me of talking too fast in lectures (I blame them for listening too slowly)His latest offering is Coral - A Pessimist in Paradise:
The reefs tell the tale of how life began and record many of the catastrophes through which it has struggled. As human folly threatens their paradise with premature demise such places remind every one of us, pessimist or otherwise, that our own extinction is as certain as theirs. Whether it will take place in the slow course of evolutionary time or in the near future as our impudence causes Nature to take her revenge, neither Newton nor Darwin can say.It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a scientist in possession of an audience, must be in want of an aphorism. And Jones is rarely short of an aphorism:
Science is a broad church full of narrow minds, trained to know ever more about even less.