Posts Tagged ‘Google’
Tuesday, August 11th, 2009
The current search engine, doing the vanity search, http://www.google.com/search?q=judielaine, returns “judielaine’s Trips – Trip Planner – Yahoo! Travel” in result 3 & 4 . The new search engine, apparently code-named “Caffeine,”, for the same vanity search, http://www2.sandbox.google.com/search?hl=en&q=judielaine doesn’t return the Yahoo result until result ten and Google property YouTube replaces the Yahoo Travel result. (YouTube is number 6 in the current engine.
I can’t say whether that is “faster, more accurate and more comprehensive” but it is mildly amusing.
New: Results 1 - 50 of about 16,400 for judielaine. (0.34 seconds)
Old: Results 1 - 50 of about 15,900 for judielaine. (0.29 seconds)
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Tags: Google, Yahoo
Posted in digital libraries | No Comments »
Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
I was, unfortunately, out of town for a few weeks when the news of the Save the Bay trash rankings came out. In the rankings Permanente Creek ranks 18th and Stevens Creek 20th. There was a flurry of stories like this one from Palo Alto Online. This later Los Altos Town Crier story from 1 October outlines the impact that the trash rankings have on municipal governments.
As an aside — the eWaste fundraiser for the Stevens & Permanente Creek Watershed Council (SPCWC) raised $700 to help the Council address issues that include trash in the creek.
Another big story over the month is the peripherally-related Hanger One story of reactions to the Navy’s proposal to strip Hanger One down to a frame. The Moffett Users blog is a good source for information as well as stories in the Mercury and Mountain View Voice. I can’t begin to summarize.
In other Moffett related discussion, this blog entry notes the Google development work planned at Moffett may add an additional bridge over Stevens Creek, and urges Google to consider using developed office space that is currently unoccupied.
The Mountain View Voice ran a story on the Cuesta Annex, location of an overflow basin for “fifty year” flood levels:
Afshin Rouhani of the water district explained that the flood basin is part of a system of flood retention basins proposed for Permanente Creek. The Annex would only be needed in a “50-year flood,” which has a 2 percent chance of happening annually. Water would have to fill the basin proposed for Blach School in Los Altos before it would begin to fill the Annex, arriving through a pipe that would run under city streets and enter at the southeast corner of the basin.
The water would flow out of the northwest edge of the basin after one or two days, Rouhani said.
Another Voice story reported on the developments for the Permanente Creek trail:
In the city’s quest to extend the Permanente Creek Trail over Highway 101, a $9.43 million tunnel under Old Middlefield Way was supported by a majority of the City Council in a study session Tuesday.
[...]
The project currently lacks a full budget….
Finally, The San Jose Mercury ran a story on the archery range in the Stevens Creek County Park:
The club maintains the 51-year-old Stevens Creek Archery Range, buried in Stevens Creek County Park and straddling the border of Cupertino and Saratoga. The club works in cooperation with the Santa Clara County Parks and Recreation Department. Bowhunters Unlimited, for a small annual fee, maintains the practice range, the trails and targets through volunteer labor.
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Tags: basin, bay, Blach School, Bowhunters Unlimited, City Council, Council, creek, Cuesta Annex, Cupertino, eWaste, Finally The San Jose Mercury, Google, Hanger One, Highway, Los Altos, Los Altos Town Crier, Mercury, moffett, Mountain View Voice, Navy's, October, Old Middlefield Way, Palo Alto Online, Permanente, permanente creek, permanente creek trail, Recreation Department, Rouhani, Santa Clara County Parks, Saratoga, Save, Stevens, stevens creek, Stevens Creek Archery Range, Stevens Creek County Park, Stevens Permanente Creek Watershed Council SPCWC, stories, The Annex, The Moffett Users, The Mountain View Voice, Tuesday, Water
Posted in stevens creek, streamkeeping | No Comments »
Saturday, August 9th, 2008
Today’s installment from macmap (Macintosh Mapping and GPS Group) had a notice about HoudahGeo 1.4.12 release, in turn from MacInTouch.com. I have a few projects from July where i’ve photos and my GPS tracks, and i’ve been experimenting with using iShowU to record the GoogleEarth animation to include in a slide show. So, i’m ready to play with HoudaGeo.
I imported my three hundred plus whale watching photos (from our great Sanctuary Cruises trip) into HoudahGeo. That took noticeable time, but wasn’t long enough to get distracted. Then i imported the tracklog in GPX format (after a quick conversion with MacGPS Pro). HoudahGeo has a function to import from the GPS , but i did not test that. A quick prompt to verify whether there was time difference in the camera, and voila, a lat long for every image. I’ll note that the interpolation wasn’t well tested in this experiment, but it sufficiently automates what one would do without the code. Most importantly, the software is very easy to use. There’s an opportunity to title and write descriptions within the HoudahGeo interface, and since the application makes standard sidecar files or (presumably) will produce new EXIF data, i find that more appealing than creating image data in iPhoto.
Exporting, with the trial limitation of three images per project, was straightforward as well. (Note that the second image i exported wasn’t the nice image of the Risso’s Dolphins i expected. Pout.) My note about “presumably” above is because i produced sidecar XMP files the first time round, and my subsequent change of configuration did not rewrite the image with edited exif. Bug or limitation of trial or user error are all possible explanations.
The Flickr export went well, although i’m disappointed to find Flickr’s map doesn’t import the geolocation tags.
The win is, in my opinion, the kmz export option. Viewing in Google Earth is very pleasant, and it’s a format one can share with others. If you have a place to host your kmz file, you can give folks the URL and they the photos and the track in Google Earth: houdahgeotest.kmz (248 kb). Note that the time line function in Google Earth is supported! With a hosted location, i was also able to import the kmz into my maps at Google Maps. I’m not sure why there’s an offset between the trail and the red dots. If Google Maps is your destination for the images, it looks like you should edit the kmz in GoogleEarth (or your KMZ editor) before posting. Still, it’s a neat way to put your images in a place. I admit that the “featureless” ocean surface may not be the best example of this; the track over the USGS relief map of the Monterey Canyon gives the whale’s view of where we were.
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Tags: Bug, EXIF, Exporting, Flickr's, Google, google earth, Google Maps, GoogleEarth, gps, GPS Group, GPX, HoudaGeo, Houdahgeo, I'll, I'm, If Google Maps, Image, Imported, iPhoto, iShowU, July, KMZ, MacGPS Pro, Macintosh Mapping, MacInTouch, mapping, Monterey Canyon, Note, Pout, Risso's Dolphins, Sanctuary Cruises, The Flickr, There's, Today's, URL, USGS, View Larger Map, Viewing, XMP
Posted in GPS and GIS | 3 Comments »
Friday, August 8th, 2008
Where: First Baptist Church Los Altos, 625 Magdalena Ave, Los Altos, CA 94024 (View larger Google map.)
When: Saturday, 2008-09-06 9 am – 4pm
We are accepting all electronics such as but not limited to: computers, monitors, printers, mouse, keyboards, scanners, copiers, stereos, speakers, servers, LCDs, phone systems, PDAs, PS, switches, test equipment, cellphones, TVs, cables, wires, DVD players, CD players, MP3 players, game systems, electronic test equipment, RAM, VGA, cameras, projectors, CPU, HDD, FDD, zipdrives , motherboards, memory, VHS, laptops, calculators, overhead projectors , battery chargers, power cords, microphones, cartridges, etc.
All recycled in the US.
Please bring your items over and help us fund our continued work.
For more information please call (408) 356-8258 or email ed@spcwc.org.
Use your “save file as” function to download the iCal file for SPCWC eWaste Fundraiser.
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Tags: cd, CPU HDD FDD, DVD, File, First Baptist Church Los Altos Magdalena Ave Los Altos , Google, iCal, LCDs, MP, PDAs PS, players, Please, projectors, RAM VGA, Saturday, SPCWC eWaste Fundraiser, TVs, VHS
Posted in stevens creek, streamkeeping | 2 Comments »
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Blogging while out of it with a cold is probably only slightly less risky of public embarrassment than filing bug reports while out of it. To get the embarrassment out of the way, why, yes, i watched the highlights of the Puppy Bowl and Kitten Halftime Show.
Another set of videos i’ve been watching include YouTube clips a friend is using while teaching a Classics course. Some clips are probably not hosted at YouTube with the History Channel’s blessing, an issue Google can address. The interesting video was a montage of images for Iron Maiden’s “Alexander the Great”. This particular video scrolls the text of the song, which may be why it was selected, and ends with the flag of the Macedonian region of Greece. I probably wouldn’t have thought twice about it, except i broke one of my rules of visiting YouTube: i read a comment.
Also learn to loose cause as you know that the star of Vergina-the sign of ancient Macedonia is legally use ONLY FROM GREECE and you don’t have any rights since 1995 to use it to your flag!!!
This put a new spin on the sort of “you can’t use that” that challenges the remix culture. Can’t use the copyrighted song? No, can’t use an ancient symbol, part of the cultural commons. What?
Apparently, in 1977 a casket was discovered in an archaeological site near the town of Vergina, in which some archaeologists believe are the remains of Philip II, father of Alexander the Great. The symbol on the casket became known as the Verginal Sun, and became adopted as a symbol of Macedonian identity. From wikipedia, “It became the subject of international controversy in 1991 when the newly independent Republic of Macedonia used the symbol on its flag. This outraged Greek public opinion, which saw the use of the symbol as an insult to its historical heritage and implying a territorial claim on Greece. In 1995 the Republic of Macedonia agreed to drop the use of the symbol.” The Macedonia naming dispute continues, with the Republic of Macedonia being recognized in the UN as “the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” (FYROM).
I couldn’t help but check out The Artist Formerly Known As Prince a wikipedia, and found that he’s involved in a lawsuit over the incidental use of his music in a film of a baby bouncing.
All this reading was while i was waiting for Parallels to run through a number of Windows updates and installs that were needed to watch an Educause Live presentation on a study on the economic value of fair use (balanced use).
Matthew Schruers
Senior Counsel for Litigation and Legislative Affairs
Computer and Communications Industry Association
Copyright Fair Use and the Economy
The discussion was quite interesting, generally demonstrating how the open aspects of copyright law have a significant and positive effect on the US economy. Hopefully, this economic analysis will be able to balance the clamor of large industries intent on arguing for stronger protections.
I’m all set to watch the next in the series:
February 29, 2008
Update on Key Copyright Developments in the U.S.
James G. Neal
Vice President for Information Services and University Librarian, Columbia University
Cryptic notes from the presentation follow:
(more…)
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Tags: blogging, Can't, classics, Communications Industry Association, Computer, congress, Contracts, Copyright Fair Use, copyrighted, Cryptic, DRM, Economy, Educause Live, EU, EU's, Fair, February, Format, Google, Greece, Greek, History Channel's, Hopefully, I'm, Improvements, Information Services, Iron Maiden's Alexander, James G Neal, Key Copyright Developments, Kitten Halftime Show, Leads, Legislative Affairs, Litigation, Macedonia, Macedonia FYROM, Macedonian, Matthew Schruers, ONLY FROM GREECE, Parallels, Philip II, POINT We, protections, Puppy Bowl, Republic, Senior Counsel, Symbol, The Artist Formerly Known As Prince, The Macedonia, U S, UN, University Librarian Columbia University, UPDATE, Vergina, Vergina-the, Verginal Sun, Vice President, Windows, YouTube, Yugoslav Republic
Posted in copyright, remix | No Comments »
Saturday, January 26th, 2008
[I'm pretty sure these iframe-embedded maps will not translate to any syndicating sites.] It was pretty easy to generate the maps using MyMaps on Google. I found myself wishing Heifer published a KML file of their projects. This leads me to a grand vision of having views of sustainability programs all on one map. WiserEarth has something like that but it’s more the location of organizations rather than layers of projects. That’s still an interesting project: who is doing what near you — and why not help a local organization.
This was a digression from proposing a project for a family Yule gift for 2008, but it seemed *seeing* where we had touched the world this past Yule would be a good way to think about the next year. It’s a trivial spatial analysis, and yet it’s rather exciting to be able to so simply share it with family around the globe.
I also find myself so tempted to make custom icons. Little Kiva K’s —
? Little gift boxes for the family gifts? Not today….
Bush Family Yule Gifts
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Representing where our heifer from Heifer International will end up was hard. I chose two African countries.
Kiva Loans
View Larger Map
My Lending History at Kiva
kiva, wiserearth, heifer, giving, philanthropy, global aid, spatial analysis
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Tags: gift, Google, Heifer, Heifer International, It's, Kiva, KML, Little, Little Kiva K's, maps, My Lending History, MyMaps, Projects, Representing, That's, View Larger Map, WiserEarth, Yule
Posted in household | 2 Comments »
Friday, December 14th, 2007
I am delighted to discover the foundation of the Organization for Transformative Works via this if:book blog entry. While i’ve not been moved to storytelling via characters established elsewhere in the culture, i recognize it as a strong statement about our culture. I wonder about the time prior to TV and the certainty of historical research when you can imagine, “Tell us another story about King Arthur,” led to tales where the story teller could invent a new narrative, mixing in familiar landscapes and other characters. Cut-up, mix-up, mash-up may be post modern, but may also be pre-modern — modern, in the sense used by historians (not art and music scholars), to mark the distinctive arc of Western European culture for the past 500 years. In the excellent Dawn to Decadence by Jacques Barzun, he cites Petrarch as one of the first creators to express the desire that his name would be known because of his creations. This sense of ownership of one’s creation is, indeed, modern, and has a great deal of value. In contrast, the sense of creative work as part of a shared culture is ancient and, in a sense, definitive of human culture. I see in fan culture a connection to the ephemeral sharing of storytelling and culture building throughout time.
And then copyright, an infant concept when we look at cultural history, steps in with the modern age, Petrarch, and the printing press. First, the king controlled the copying. (Freedom of the press wasn’t just for newspapers but all mechanical duplication.) Works derived from one another — operas, ballets, plays, poems, novels — creating a stew of characters and plots that fed language and metaphor, created a shared experience. In the twentieth century with broadcast media, the shared smorgasbord of personalities and fictional characters became even more pervasive. Superman outstrips Zeus in Google hits. (Thor beats Mickey Mouse, but often as a brand or product name.)
Fanfiction seems to me a continuation of the human response of “Tell us another story.” I believe we need to make sure that storytellers are protected in their creative explorations of how characters are becoming more than an element of a creation but part of the cultural fabric. I can certainly understand creators wanting reward for their work, but in releasing their work to an audience, they have no choice but to give up control. Each viewer, reader interprets and understands a work in their own way. Characters show up in our dreams, in our jokes, in our fantasies, in our references. It’s not a large leap to storytelling. In telling new stories in a shared mythology or “history” — consider Mark Twain’s account of King Arthur and then E B White’s and then Marion Zimmer Bradley’s — storytellers weave the narrative into the culture, culture into the narrative. Surely, this has been happening throughout time: children playing out their new narratives, parents telling stories, amateur theater, 18th century tableaus. Now, with the internet creating a way to share and celebrate this sort of retelling, the issues of fair use suddenly become visible to the rights owners.
It’s an important part of sharing and understanding our lives, our world, and it’s great to see a group forming to support the activity.
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Tags: Characters, culture, Cut-up, Dawn, Decadence, E B White's, Fanfiction, Freedom, Google, It's, Jacques Barzun, King Arthur, Marion Zimmer Bradley's, Mark Twain's, Mickey Mouse, Organization, Petrarch, shared, story, Superman, Surely, Tell, Thor, Transformative Works, TV, Western European, works, Zeus
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Sunday, October 14th, 2007
First, to note that the Weed Mapping Coordinator for the creek, Cyrus Hiatt, has produced an excellent resource at the SPCWC – Weed Mapping website. Particularly nice is the implementation of a Google map of the weed locations.
I regret that I’ve not been able to participate in the meetings of the SPCWC this year. I’m not sure how this will change as the OCLC offices move from Shoreline to San Mateo.
We’ve had first rains in the area this past week — on Wednesday the 10th and on Friday the 12th. I had observed a heavy downpour at home on the morning of the 10th. I was able to get to the creek about lunch time and observed the tide coming in. The air was filled with the rich scent of wet reeds and soil, but i didn’t observe much in the creek that was due to the rain. I could see in the distance the Charleston Marsh out-fall pumping out.
invasive plants
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Tags: charleston marsh, creek, cyrus hiatt, Friday, Google, I'm, I've, mapping, Note, observed, oclc, Particularly, San Mateo, Shoreline, spcwc, We've, Wednesday, weed, Weed Mapping, Weed Mapping Coordinator
Posted in stevens creek, streamkeeping | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 29th, 2007
This morning, while listening to the clip of Miss teen South Carolina on the NBC morning show, Christine and i talked a little about maps and cartography and map colors and our cartographic education. I muttered something about no mention being made of the four color theorem and promptly checked the wikipedia article. Lo, it seems that the theorem is not particularly relevant to cartography.
This reminds me, though, that i’ve been meaning to respond to a rare comment, and praise the refreshed look of the Yahoo Maps. They’ve been refreshed for months now, and i still react with pleasure when i see the design. Starting at the city scale (a search for Mountain View, CA), which a common scale to many regional driving paper maps, the first distinct difference that strikes me is the multicolored roadways. The cherry red double line clearly communicates the restricted access nature of interstates and some highways. It is somewhat conventional, but clarity in communication is often dependent on convention. (Jakob Nielsen is consistent in pointing out that, no matter how goofy the metaphor, shopping cart is the expected label for the ecommerce function of a website.)
When that distinctly different line and color is compared to the gold and grey (in two weights) major thoroughfares and streets, the difference in the type road is unambiguous. Yahoo has clearly communicated difference. I love the little triangle flanges that indicate the access ramps as well — that seems a true innovation over standard symbology. The two other services are less distinct in their symbology. Both Google and Mapquest offer four “distinct” road symbols at the same scale. Mapquest uses three different gold colors in three different weights, plus grey. Google uses two different yellow colors in three weights — although the weight distinction is subtle — and grey. A final note, by using such a powerful red for the limited access highways, Yahoo does not need to use such a heavy line weight to distinguish them from the major arteries.
It seems the text labels have a more intelligent algorithm behind them on the Yahoo map. Google’s text has a large halo that ends up looking cluttered, as labels don’t quite fit the domains. I suspect the Yahoo algorithm chooses to suppress those labels. It is a common cartographic practice that is far less troublesome in a digital map than on paper, as zooming in brings a scale at which a label can fit. Google’s labels show a hodge podge of regional park labels, and i’m not sure which label goes to which green area. Yahoo also uses a variety of fonts and font formats to show counties, different towns and populated areas, which are all well supported by distinct color grounds for the different regions.
I’m sure a more careful review could turn up more details and innovations, but this brief review is long overdue. Congratulations to the team at Yahoo Maps for such a lovely cartographic upgrade!
Yahoo maps, neocartography, digital cartography
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Tags: Both Google, cartography, christine, Colors, Congratulations, Google, Google's, I'm, Jakob Nielsen, label, Lo, Mapquest, maps, Miss, Mountain View CA, NBC, South Carolina, starting, They've, Yahoo, Yahoo Maps
Posted in GPS and GIS | No Comments »
Friday, June 22nd, 2007
Agreeing to Disagree: Search Engines and their Public Interfaces, presented by Frank McCown with Michael L. Nelson
This paper described an experiment to see whether the search APIs offered by Google, MSN, and Yahoo differed from the results given by the web interface. There are some fascinating results in this five month study, available on-line. Broad conclusions include that the MSN search API produces the most stable and similar results to the web interface, that the indexes may be smaller than the web interface but are just as fresh, and there are big changes in the top ranked between API and WUI with Google, not so much with Yahoo. A note that Google’s backlink results seem pretty stale, while MSN and Yahoo are more fresh.
A good question was how did the researcher justify the violation of terms of service by screen scraping from the web interface. Frank described how he tried to get permission but could not reach someone to give (or not) that permission. He described trying to do no harm, limiting use to below that allowed by the API, and so on. The larger question of the very closed nature of these search engines — indeed, the research was driven because of the lack of information about the resource — their increasing impact in the academy was not directly addressed.
Static Reformulation: A User Study of Static Hypertext for Query-Based Reformulation, presented by Michael Huggett, co-author Joel Lanir
An interesting experiment on how most effectively follow the “scent of information” comparing keyword search to a browse of a cluster of computationally similar (based on keywords) documents. It was a vary controled and constructed experiment, The broad takeaway for myself was the distinction between task differences of when browse and search are more effective in retrieving articles. The trick here, it seems, is in constructing the browse of similar items. I’ve never found Google’s “similar” to support that; in bibliographic data classes and subject headings are the manualy constructed to provide that browse network. It’d be interesting to see the study repeated using that body of “similarity.” (I note that the Recommind engine esentially built collections of similar bibliographic records and that fed into the result sets.)
Later in the afternoon there was
“Effects of Structure and Interaction Style on Distinct Search Tasks”
presented by Robert Capra, coauthors Gary Marchionini, Jung Sun Oh, Fred Stutzman and Yan Zhang
This compared the hand-crafted, high information density front page of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (I suspect that Edward Tufte would approve) to two of faceted browse interfaces. This test had a couple of different tasks, but didn’t find a particular improvement between the two different interfaces. Admittedly, though, all three were browse tests. Users noted how they missed the search interface and were frustrated.
A Rich OPAC User Interface with AJAX, Jesse Prabawa Gozali and Min-Yen Kan, presented by min-Yen Kan
My work with RedLightGreen gave some depth to my admiration for this presentation of an OPAC interface using AJAX with a MySQL or Lucene backend which is intended to replace an Innovative interface (for discovery, presumably). Goals were to create a way to compare different detailed results and dynamically change sort order. A particularly elegant feature is how users can determine whether a particular item is listed in different search results (tabs for the search history). The interface can be reviewed at http://opac.comp.nus.edu.sg I ponder scalability, of course, and the difference in the RedLightGreen Google-like ranking as opposed to the traditional sort choices.
The Large Scale Collections session was rather engaging for me. (”Large-Scale Collections A New Generation of Textual Corpora: Mining Corpora from Very Large Collections” Gordon Stewart, Gregory Crane** and Alison Babeu; “Subject Metadata Enrichment using Statistical Topic Models” David Newman**, Kat Hagedorn, Chaitanya Chemudugunta and Padhraic Smyth; and “Organizing the OCA: Learning faceted subjects from a library of digital books” David Mimno** and Andrew McCallum; where **presenter) Greg Crane (of Perseus Digital Library), in a similar vein as his talk in the panel on Thursday, spoke about very rich tools needed for scholarly work in textual corpa. I reflect on a conversation I had with a colleague in RLG Programs, Monday before i left, about what tools are needed on top of these large collections of thext (Google, Open Content Alliance, Gutenberg). Greg has a long wish list! Of particular interest to me are the edition comparison and management needs, but Greg brings up an idea that — i’ve heard this before, does it go back to Vannevar Bush? Or Greg at a previous JCDL? — books should talk to other books. A book should link out to a concordance, a phrase that is referred to in other works should link to those references (ah, for trackbacks to Shakespeare). Greg frames this in the great humanities question of “how do we understand human expression” and notes that Western culture has perhaps done a good job understanding western culture, but not broader global human expression. (A hint, yesterday, that issues of “Homeland Security” might be better addressed by better cultural literacy.)
The next two talks had to do with statistical assignment of items to topics or classifications, a similar process to the latent semantic indexing (LSI) we applied to the union catalog with Recommind. The labeling of the topics still seems to be manual (which isn’t surprising but one can always hope for miracles). What was particularly interesting was, to support parallelizing the process, David Mimno describes in “Organizing the OCA: Learning faceted subjects from a library of digital books” applying the classification process on a page by page process (generate in book classification) and then classifying those across a much larger corpus. That page by page classification, though, then assigns each word to different classes. In a sense, each word on the page is classified, and inturn disambiguated from different meanings of the same term. It’s clear that there’s a springboard here to Greg Crane’s wish list.
JCDL, JCDL2007, search, latent semantic indexing, LSI, machine categorization, OCA, Open Content Alliance
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Tags: AJAX, Broad, Bureau, David Mimno, Disagree, Distinct Search Tasks, Edward Tufte, Effects, Frank, Frank McCown, Gary Marchionini Jung Sun Oh Fred Stutzman, Goals, Google, Google MSN, Google Open Content Alliance Gutenberg, Google's, Greg, Greg Crane, Greg Crane's, Homeland Security, I've, Innovative, Interaction Style, interfaces, It'd, It's, jcdl, JCDL JCDL, Joel Lanir, Labor Statistics I, Large-Scale Collections A New Generation, LSI, Lucene, Michael Huggett, Michael L Nelson, min-Yen Kan, Mining Corpora, MSN, MySQL, OCA Learning, OCA Open Content Alliance, OPAC, Organizing, Padhraic Smyth, Perseus Digital Library, Public Interfaces, Query-Based Reformulation, Recommind, RedLightGreen, RedLightGreen Google-like, results, RLG Programs Monday, Robert Capra, search, Search Engines, Shakespeare, similar, Static Hypertext, Static Reformulation, Statistical Topic Models David Newman Kat Hagedorn Chai, Structure, Textual Corpora, The Large Scale Collections, Thursday, Users, Vannevar Bush Or Greg, Very Large Collections Gordon Stewart Gregory Crane, western, WUI, Yahoo, Yan Zhang
Posted in TunaBreath, digital libraries | 1 Comment »