Thursday, December 29, 2005

NASACAST : Download the Universe

NASA has officially announced its podcasting service - NASACAST.

NASA Podcasts let you subscribe and automatically download new NASA audio and video content when it becomes available. The official NASA Portal podcast, NASAcast, contains the latest audio and video features from the NASA web site, NASATV's This Week at NASA, and more.

The podcast will be very useful to the students to know about the development in Space Research.

You can even subscribe to the RSS feeds for the latest updates.....

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

My Visit to Humayun Tomb ....

Last weekend, I visited Humayun tomb.

This tomb was built for Humayun, second Mughal Emperor of India, in 1570 by his persian wife Hamida Begum. A magnificent building in the center of the New Delhi.


Its plan, based on the description of Islamic paradise gardens, is known to have inspired the Taj Mahal and many later Mughal tombs. This type of garden is known as a charbagh and is based on a grid. Humayun's tomb was added to Unesco's World Heritage List in 1993.

I have snapped a good number of pictures and you can have a look at them in my flickr (http://flickr.com/photos/pandian ).

A great place for audio, video content & Visual Books

Learnoutloud.com has some amazing free audio and video contents. There are lot of interesting speeches, videos and audio books available. The contents are categorized into different subjects. Business category has many valuable contents from management gurus...

Some of the top class contents are Software Breakthroughs by Billgates, A Conversation with Jack Welch by Jack Welch.

Einstein’s 100th "Anniversary" Lectures for free

Hey... Its interesting... Do you like to know more about E=MC2. Which we studied in our High school and never understood what it was ????

Lectures on the history of physics: "Einstein's Miraculous Year" and “Relativity in a Nutshell” are presented by Professor Richard Wolfson, a 20-year teaching veteran at Middlebury College, These lectures reflect his expertise in interpreting science for the non-specialist.

In “Einstein's Miracle Year,” you will learn about 1905, when the great physicist published major works in diverse areas of physics. Two of them—on the quantum nature of light and on special relativity—laid the groundwork for much of 20th-century physics. Others presented final convincing evidence for the reality of atoms and molecules.

Einstein's name is most closely associated with the Theory of Relativity. In “Relativity in a Nutshell,” Dr. Wolfson outlines the essence of relativity and hints at why the theory requires a radical restructuring of our notions of time and space.

You may listen to these lectures at your computer by choosing to "stream" them, or you may download them to listen on your computer without being attached to the Internet. You may also burn them to a CD or load them on a portable listening device if you download them.

You may access your free lectures online.

Friday, December 09, 2005

Yahoo... ! Answers

Yahoo ... ! has come up with another socializing tool Yahoo..! Answers .

Yahoo! Answers is a place where people ask each other questions on any topic, and get answers by sharing facts, opinions, and personal experiences. Here is how ask a question in yahoo answers.

Asking a Question

Categorize
When asking a question, you categorize it in a topic, making it easier for others to find and answer it.

Open Question
Your question is open for others to answer for 14 days. You can extend or shorten this time period.

Voters' Choice for Best Answer
Once your question is answered, select the best answer, or have the community vote for the best answer.

Google already has a similar tool, Google Answers (Paid Service) - which has, more than 500 carefully screened Researchers to answer your question for as little as $2.50 -- usually within 24 hours.

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

025.431: THE DEWEY BLOG

Hey its a wonderful blog..... It's a blog dedicated to the great Dewey Decimal Classification and Knowledge Organization. It's edited by Jonathan Furner, assistant editor of the DDC, with contributions from other members of the Dewey editorial team.

Some of the aspects of this blog is quite interesting, such as
  • They publish new and changed entries of DDC on the first day of each month.
  • Categories are based on DDC scheme. Its amazing to see the posts organized with DDC.
  • Tips for classifying rare information....
Even the title of the blog is classified (025.431) Its a must see blog for Library professionals, who use DDC. Kudos to the DDC team for creating such a wonderful and insightful blog.

How to love the job you hate

Today I read an interesting article in Rediff.com, written by Scott Reeves, of Forbes.

At some point of time in our life, we really hate the job that we do. Its not only you and me, nearly 87% of Americans hate their jobs.

"We spend our highest-energy hours working, and families get what's left," says Jane Boucher, author of How to Love the Job You Hate: Job Satisfaction for the 21st Century. "Most of us can't just quit our jobs."

The question is simple: How do you make things better in a job that doesn't rouse your interest? Boucher offers ten tips:

1. Communicate: Let the boss know your achievements and problems. Don't boast and don't gripe. Create a sense of teamwork. Define the problem at hand and offer ways to solve it.

2. Do Something for Yourself: Take on a project that's dear to your heart or set aside time for what you do best. For example, if you got into medicine because you wanted to be a caregiver but find yourself buried in paperwork, find the time to be with your patients. Make an effort to connect with each patient and his or her family.

3. Improve a Bad Relationship: Some people are born grumpy and simply won't like you. Instead of fretting about it and thinking it's something you did, simply ask the person each day, "Is there anything I can do for you?" This will ease the tension and, over time, may win over the person who has the long knives out for no apparent reason.

4. Delegate: Never allow process to trump the result. Remember that you can't do everything all the time. Pass off some of the grunt work to a hungry young staffer who needs to learn the basics and a fundamental lesson in life: You don't start at the top, and you earn plumb assignments by working hard in the trenches.

If you create a clear path of advancement, the smart employee won't kick when asked to handle routine stuff.

5. Seek Feedback: Ask your boss and co-workers, "How am I doing?" Make it clear that you seek feedback to improve your performance -- not because you crave praise. Show others how feedback can increase their productivity and boost their career choices.

6. Tackle Tough Assignments First: Get the difficult or unpleasant work out of the way first, because it doesn't improve with age and will look truly hideous after lunch. This also allows you to finish the day with something you find challenging and enjoy.

7. Have A Little Fun: Work isn't play, but it doesn't have to be mind-numbingly serious all the time. A few quips will boost everyone's morale. If you're not the office wag, encourage the lighthearted goofball in the corner to share his take on why the Yankees are baseball's best team.

It beats grinding your teeth for eight hours a day and is likely to boost morale and productivity.

8. Encourage Teamwork: Doing more with less demands increased productivity. Teamwork is a good way to achieve this goal. Working in teams is a learned skill. If you don't know the basics, learn them and share your insights with others.

9. Body and Soul: Pay attention to your physical and mental health. Stick to the basics: Eat right, exercise and get enough sleep. If you feel crummy, your job performance will suffer. You don't have to be a corporate guru to figure that out.

10. Get a Life: People who have interests outside work make better employees, friends, parents and spouses. Take the time to do whatever it is that you're passionate about. No one on his deathbed ever said, "I wish I'd spent more time at the office."

These basic steps will work at mom-and-pop businesses and across all industries, including semiconductor companies such as Intel, banks such as Wells Fargo, food processors such as Tyson Foods, software companies such as Microsoft or cutting-edge researchers such as Genentech -- you name it.

"Don't let your job become just a paycheck," Boucher says. "At its best, your job can be an expression of creativity."

Its quite interesting to read and will try to follow these tips.

Monday, December 05, 2005

BIOME - A guide to internet resources in the health and life sciences

BIOME is a collection of gateways which provide access to evaluated, quality Internet resources in the health and life sciences, aimed at students, researchers, academics and practitioners. BIOME is created by a core team of information specialists and subject experts based at the University of Nottingham Greenfield Medical Library, in partnership with key organisations throughout the UK and further afield.

BIOME is a hub within the Resource Discovery Network (RDN) and is funded by the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC).

The gateways in BIOME are free catalogue of hand-selected and evaluated Internet resources.

  • OMNI - Internet resources in Health and Medicine.
  • NMAP - Internet resources in Nursing, Midwifery and the Allied Health Professions.
  • VetGate - Internet resources in Animal Health.
  • BioResearch - Internet resources, covering the biological and biomedical sciences (biochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, virology, biotechnology etc.).
  • Natural Selection - Internet resources on the natural world, co-ordinated by The Natural History Museum, London.
  • AgriFor - Internet resources in agriculture, food and forestry.

Friday, December 02, 2005

What is Web 2.0

These days we hear a lot about web 2.0 and I recieve many queries about it. Here, I present some basic information about web 2.0, from Wikipedia.

Early web development (in this context, labeled Web 1.0) often comprised static HTML pages that were updated rarely, if at all. The success of the dot-com era depended on a more dynamic Web (sometimes labeled Web 1.5) where content management systems served dynamic HTML web pages created on the fly from a content database that could more easily be changed. In both senses, so-called eyeballing was considered intrinsic to the Web experience, thus making page hits and visual aesthetics important factors.

Web 2.0 is "a social phenomenon referring to an approach to creating and distributing Web content itself, characterised by open communication, decentralization of authority, freedom to share and re-use, and "the market as a conversation"

Proponents of the Web 2.0 approach believe that Web usage is increasingly oriented toward interaction and rudimentary social networks, which can serve content that exploits network effects with or without creating a visual, interactive web page.

Many recently developed concepts and technologies are seen as contributing to Web 2.0, including weblogs, wikis, podcasts, rss feeds and other forms of many to many publishing; social software, web APIs, web standards, online web services, AJAX, and others.


Technology

The technology infrastructure of Web 2.0 is complex and evolving. A website could be said to be built using Web 2.0 technologies if it featured a number of the following techniques: Comparison to web 1.0

According to Tim O'Reilly Web 2.0 can be compared to Web 1.0 in this way: http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html

Web 1.0 Web 2.0
DoubleClick Google AdSense
Ofoto Flickr
Akamai BitTorrent
MP3.com Napster
Britannica Online Wikipedia
personal websites blogging
Evite upcoming.org and EVDB
domain name speculation search engine optimization
page views cost per click
screen scraping web services
publishing participation
content management systems wikis
directories (taxonomy) tagging ("folksonomy")
stickiness syndication

Thursday, December 01, 2005

A map for blogging librarians

Hey..! Its amazing to see a map to find where the blogging librarians reside. There are around 195 members, interestingly no one from India.

Do you like to be mapped, just have a photo and click here .The service is prvovided by Frappr and its free of cost.

LibDex - Index to 18,000 Libraries

LibDex is a worldwide index to more than 18,000 library catalogues, websites, library blogs and some library jornals. Its a neat site, has a good number of OPAC's around the world.