Entrepreneurial Resources (EntrepreneurialResources.info) is a Subject Tracer™ Information Blog developed and created by the Virtual Private Library™. It is designed to monitor entrepreneurial resources on the World Wide Web.
This site will provide you with a DNS report for your domain. A very large percentage of domains have DNS problems; this site will help you find those problems and fix them. Also, the “Mail Test” tool will help find mail delivery problems for your domain. This site is a sister site to www.DNSstuff.com, which has many other DNS and networking tools. This has been added to World Wide Web Reference Subjecty Tracer™ Information Blog.
This site, established by Bob Futrelle in January 2001, is to be a collection of resources and links to resources about all aspects of natural language processing (NLP) and in particular its use in information extraction from biology texts. It is a non-commercial site dedicated to research in this field. It is not meant to teach NLP. But it does attempt to give you organized access to resources from which you can learn. I’ll also be including links to on-line materials for courses at various schools, so you could actually work through courses in this area, on-line. This has been added to Biological Informatics Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
Biotechnology is an international official journal of the Asian Network for Scientific Information publishing original articles, reviews and short communications of a high scientific and ethical standard in biotechnology. Subjects covered include: agricultural biotechnology, Environmental biotechnology, applied immunology, genomics, molecular engineering, gene therapy, tissue engineering. A priority publication scheme exists for papers of outstanding merit and topicality. Biotechnology is abstracted/indexed by: ASCI, AGRIS, AGRICOLA and CABI. Biotechnology is a peer reviewed/refereed journal. A Rigorous but Constructive evaluation process exists to maintain the quality of the journal. This has been added to Biotechnology Resources Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
For many, the web has become the information source of first resort. From keeping abreast of latest news and accessing online journals and datasets, through to finding information about travel and sport, the web has become the information tool of choice. However, despite our apparent dependence on this medium very little attention has been paid to the long-term preservation of websites. Indeed, with the life of an average website estimated to be around 44 days (about the same lifespan as a housefly) there is a danger that invaluable scholarly, cultural and scientific resources will be lost to future generations. To address this problem, a consortium of six leading UK institutions is working collaboratively on a project to develop a test-bed for selective archiving of UK websites. Using PANDAS software, developed by the National Library of Australia, consortium members will archive sites (once appropriate permissions have been obtained from website owners) relevant to their interests. For example, the Wellcome Library will focus on collecting medical sites, whilst the National Library of Wales will collect sites that reflect life in contemporary Wales. The British Library will focus on sites of cultural, historical and political importance. Once sites have been archived, catalogued and checked for completeness, they will be made accessible through this website. Users will be able to browse the archive – using broad subject headings – or search for specific sites and topics. This has been added to Research Resources Subject Tracer™ Inform,ation Blog. This will be added to Academic Resources 2006 Internet MiniGuide.
This site will provide you with a DNS report for your domain. A very large percentage of domains have DNS problems; this site will help you find those problems and fix them. Also, the “Mail Test” tool will help find mail delivery problems for your domain. This site is a sister site to www.DNSstuff.com, which has many other DNS and networking tools. This has been added to World Wide Web Reference Subjecty Tracer™ Information Blog.
This site, established by Bob Futrelle in January 2001, is to be a collection of resources and links to resources about all aspects of natural language processing (NLP) and in particular its use in information extraction from biology texts. It is a non-commercial site dedicated to research in this field. It is not meant to teach NLP. But it does attempt to give you organized access to resources from which you can learn. I’ll also be including links to on-line materials for courses at various schools, so you could actually work through courses in this area, on-line. This has been added to Biological Informatics Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
Biotechnology is an international official journal of the Asian Network for Scientific Information publishing original articles, reviews and short communications of a high scientific and ethical standard in biotechnology. Subjects covered include: agricultural biotechnology, Environmental biotechnology, applied immunology, genomics, molecular engineering, gene therapy, tissue engineering. A priority publication scheme exists for papers of outstanding merit and topicality. Biotechnology is abstracted/indexed by: ASCI, AGRIS, AGRICOLA and CABI. Biotechnology is a peer reviewed/refereed journal. A Rigorous but Constructive evaluation process exists to maintain the quality of the journal. This has been added to Biotechnology Resources Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
For many, the web has become the information source of first resort. From keeping abreast of latest news and accessing online journals and datasets, through to finding information about travel and sport, the web has become the information tool of choice. However, despite our apparent dependence on this medium very little attention has been paid to the long-term preservation of websites. Indeed, with the life of an average website estimated to be around 44 days (about the same lifespan as a housefly) there is a danger that invaluable scholarly, cultural and scientific resources will be lost to future generations. To address this problem, a consortium of six leading UK institutions is working collaboratively on a project to develop a test-bed for selective archiving of UK websites. Using PANDAS software, developed by the National Library of Australia, consortium members will archive sites (once appropriate permissions have been obtained from website owners) relevant to their interests. For example, the Wellcome Library will focus on collecting medical sites, whilst the National Library of Wales will collect sites that reflect life in contemporary Wales. The British Library will focus on sites of cultural, historical and political importance. Once sites have been archived, catalogued and checked for completeness, they will be made accessible through this website. Users will be able to browse the archive – using broad subject headings – or search for specific sites and topics. This has been added to Research Resources Subject Tracer™ Inform,ation Blog. This will be added to Academic Resources 2006 Internet MiniGuide.
BlinkPro is the Internet’s premier bookmark-management tool. The BlinkPro subscription service caters to the needs of sophisticated researchers, librarians, teachers, and other professionals for whom Web and Internet research is a vital part of their careers. BlinkPro makes all of your vital Internet-based data available from any computer at any time: at work, at home, or on the road. And because its a subscription-based service, BlinkPro doesn’t bombard you with advertising or annoying email marketing. Today, BlinkPro is managing millions of bookmarks for its rapidly growing member base. BlinkPro was founded in 1999 and is owned by Control K, LLC based in New York City. This has been added to the tools section of Research Resources Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
This site has data that converts key information about the United States into an easy to read chart that attempts to live up to Edward Tufte’s definition of graphics: intelligence made visible. The chart deals with a basic question: how are we doing? Progress is shown in green, regression in red and little change in yellow. They have broken the time periods into five year chunks with the years used in data rounded off.