Monday, September 28, 2009

Darwin Online

Get your complete works of Charles Darwin here.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Artcyclopedia

Artcyclopedia is an online fine art search engine and "guide to great art on the internet." The site focuses mostly on painting and sculpture, but also includes some decorative arts, textiles and other artistic media. The site contains brief biographical sketches of artists and the movements they are associated with as well as links to other resources about each artist, including gallery and museum sites. A nice place to start when looking for information about an artist and artwork. The site does not contain pricing or auction information; artnet.com has a database of auction and gallery pricing information.

Example entries:

Malcolm Morely

Artists by movement: Dada

Arthur Lismer

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Photomuse.org

Photomuse.org Historical photographs for research and recreational viewing from the George Eastman House and ICP collections.

"Thanks to the Internet and the World Wide Web, museums have an opportunity to serve audiences that do not have easy access to our buildings and collections. Photomuse.org is the online expression of a long-term alliance between George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film and the International Center of Photography (ICP).

While our museums each maintain websites supporting their respective programs and exhibits, George Eastman House and ICP collaborate in building Photomuse to provide online resources for the study of an important cultural subject: photography at work in the world. We invite all students and scholars -- be they academic or recreational -- to use this site and to assist us in making this a useful and authoritative learning tool."

Currently the search feature is not working; I hope to see it up and running soon.

Hungarian photographer Martin Munkacsi's lost archive

Gerda Taro's Spanish Civil War photography

Louise Brooks and the "New Woman" in Weimar cinema

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

The Gateway to 21st Century Skills

The Gateway to 21st Century Skills is a searchable database of lesson plans designed to incorporate the digitized resources of federal, state and international libraries and information providers. About the Gateway:
"The Gateway expands educators' capability to access Internet-based lesson plans, instructional units and other educational materials in all forms and formats. The Gateway's goal is to improve the organization and accessibility of the substantial collections of materials that are already available on various federal, state, university, non-profit, and commercial Internet sites to educators and learners.

The Gateway is a nonprofit consortium membership organization serving educators and trainers at all levels in the USA and around the world."
Access is free to users; consortium members pay a fee to make their records available to Gateway. Gateway then standardizes the metadata and adds elements to enhance access to the resources by K-12 teachers, their targeted user group.

The Gateway organization was formerly GEM, a USDoE-funded school library project designed to develop content, technology and data standards for K-12 education. The project has been funded by the National Educational Association since 2005 and is now known as The Gateway.

Some cool resources easily findable through Gateway:

Two Unreconciled Strivings: African-American Identity in the Gilded Age, 1877-1915

On Becoming a Certified Backyard Wildlife Habitat

Court Documents Related to Martin Luther King, Jr., and Memphis Sanitation Workers: A NARA Teaching with Documents Lesson Plan

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Encyclopedia of Chicago

Today's resource is the Encyclopedia of Chicago, a joint digitization project of the Chicago Historical Society, The Newberry Library and Northwestern University. Site materials can be searched, as well as accessed by browsing encyclopedia entries, digitized materials including photographs, ephemera, advertisements and other images, maps and special features. A user guide for advanced use is provided.

The Homes of Chicago, 1874

Modern Kitchen, 1910

The Prairie School of Architecture

Rainbow Beach

Friday, September 18, 2009

AMSER: Applied math and science repository

This entry's going to be short, as it's officially happy hour and I'm still at my desk looking at pictures of the teabaggers. Clearly we need to be spending a lot more on education in this country, which brings me to our resource today.

AMSER, the Applied Math and Science Repository, is "a portal of educational resources and services built specifically for use by those in Community and Technical Colleges but free for anyone to use. AMSER is funded by the National Science Foundation as part of the National Science Digital Library, and is being created by a team of project partners led by Internet Scout."

Obviously designed by librarians, AMSER's resources are searchable and browseable by both LC subject headings and the GEM subject classification scheme.

There is a rich variety of educational resources for high school and college teachers and learners in this repository:

AT&T Knowlege Network

Finally learn those irregular Spanish verbos

American Garden Museum

Delights of Chemistry

When I was in school we didn't have any cool resources like this to help us learn. In fact, when I was in school we didn't even have the INTERNET. We just had vax terminals and 2400 baud modems and our trusty TI-81 scientific calculators with infrared data transfer capabilities that I programmed many, many physics and chemistry formulas into before our professors stopped letting us use them during exams.

Good thing you never grow out of being a nerd. :)

Thursday, September 17, 2009

EpistemeLinks: philosophy resources on the internet

I resisted the temptation to type "internets" rather than "internet" in the title of this post. This is part of my overall language improvement plan that also involves not saying the word "dude" anymore. The situation is not as dire as it sounds, but still...

EpistemeLinks is a resource containing links to resources about philosophy, including course materials, etexts, quotations, journals and magazines, and, as a possessor of a degree in philosophy myself, two sections I myself would combine, Fun and Humour and "Job Listings."

The Fun and Humour section definitely warranted further investigation. Amazingly, users can search for jokes by philosopher- here is a list of jokes about Karl Marx. For those of steelier mettle to withstand various puns and philosophical "humor," a link to the Daniel Dennett-edited Philosophical Lexicon is provided as well.

Some of these are actually pretty funny. Or not, depending on your sense of humor. I would never deny anyone the right to cringe at these lexicon entries:

aquinas, n.pl. (from a-, not, and quine) Philosophers who refuse to deny the existence or importance of something real or significant.

churchland, n., (1) Two-ring traveling circus, a cross between a chautauqua and Disneyland, at which philosophers are given entertaining religious instruction in Science and nothing to eat but "phase space sandwiches". Hence churchlandish, adj. Doubly outlandish. (2) n. A theocracy whose official religion is eliminative materialism.

heidegger, n. A ponderous device for boring through thick layers of substance. "It's buried so deep we'll have to use a heidegger." Also useful for burying one's own past.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

The People's Archive

I stumbled across The People's Archive while browsing open access journals in BioMed Central. I'm not sure why this was linked there but I think it's wonderful and wanted to feature it as today's Reference Site of the Day.

The People's Archive is a web archive of video footage of famous thinkers, creators and artists talking about their lives. From the About page:

"Peoples Archive, part of Web of Stories Ltd., is dedicated to filming for posterity the life stories of the great thinkers, creators, and achievers of our time. The people whose stories you watch on this site are leaders of their field, whose work has influenced and changed our world as we know it."
The subjects of each biographical film speak on a technical level of their achievements rather than attempt to make their creative work understandable to a lay audience. The People's Archive is intended as a resource for present and future researchers to better understand the personalities, lives and times of the seminal thinkers of today.

Oh how I have a soft spot for the wacky Freeman Dyson

Benoit Mandelbrot

Stan Lee

Monday, September 14, 2009

British Pathe: 3,500 hours of British Pathe cinema newsreels

One of the oldest media companies in the world, British Pathe pioneered the use of the moving image for news and editorial purposes, developing the newsreel as a popular form of news distribution and entertainment. Between 1910 and 1970 British Pathe had produced over 90,000 individual news items comprising 3,500 hours of footage.

British Pathe newsreel footage is fully searchable and free for individual users to preview and enjoy; licenses for commercial use or redistribution must be negotiated with the company.

Kinks video

Tokyo Rose

Cat show, 1930's

Choose your doctor

Friday, September 11, 2009

IssueLab.org: online publishing forum for non-profit research

As I have pointed out in several earlier posts, discovering and keeping up with grey literature that is not indexed by discipline-specific databases can be a challenging, yet rewarding, means of accessing valuable statistics and information. Issuelab.org is a publishing forum that aggregates and indexes literature from think tanks and other research-producing non-profits, making the process of searching grey literature on a variety of policy topics much easier.
From Issuelab's about page:
"Each year billions of charitable dollars are spent on nonprofit research, research which journalists, policy analysts, legislators, students, activists, and grant makers all rely on to effectively address complex social issues. And yet despite the widespread interest in this work and the billions of dollars spent each year to produce it, most nonprofit research remains unpublished, hard to find, underexposed, or archived in issue-specific information silos. The nonprofit sector clearly needs a better solution than the current piecemeal approach to managing and sharing one of its greatest assets, while journalists, researchers, activists, policy makers, educators, and the general public need a much better solution for locating and accessing social research across issue areas. IssueLab is that solution."

IssueLab data is OAI-PMH compatible and harvestable by OAI aggregators. Research can also be accessed via RSS feeds for different topics of interest.

Issuelab also has an interesting blog about non-profit research- topics cover the research process, getting research seen, and relevant legislation on open data and open access initiatives.

This is a fantastic resource for librarians, researchers, policy makers, and anyone who is interested in complex social issues like poverty, global health, criminal justice and a variety of other fields. I hope to see it grow in the future.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Bookshare.org: accessible books for people with print disabilities

Bookshare.org is a non-profit that makes specially formatted files (large print as well as audio)of popular and scholarly books and magazines available to readers with print disabilities, including visual impairments, physical disabilities and severe dyslexia. The first year of membership costs $75; subsequent years cost $50. Since works are licensed to Bookshare under a special copyright agreement, users must submit proof of disability to be eligible for a Bookshare membership.

While individual memberships are encouraged, institutional memberships for schools and libraries are available at a higher rate ($300 for 30 downloads). Bookshare encourages institutions to have disabled patrons sign up for individual accounts. I think it would be wonderful if a library could subsidize all or part of the Bookshare licensing fee for their disabled patrons who cannot access their regular collections.

Bookshare continues to expand and upgrade their collection of available materials through licensing partnerships with publishers. Book content ranges from New York Times bestsellers to K-12 textbooks to Newbery Award winners to scholarly books published by The University of Chicago Press and New York University Press. Newspapers and magazines (including some Spanish language titles) are also available for download through Bookshare. Volunteer opportunities including book scanning, proofreading and reviewing are available for everyone interested.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Smithsonian Library: Galaxy of Images

The Smithsonian Institution Libraries' Galaxy of Images contains a sampling of digitized materials from the many collections housed at the Smithsonian. In addition to the many digital collections created and maintained by library staff, the Galaxy of Images makes available high-resolution scans of materials that support research from the Smithsonian's holdings. Users can search or browse the images.

Some of my favorites:

Hand-tinted lithographs of "life on the moon"

Lily plant illustration from 1500

Workingman's Model Home, 1893

Chocolate bunny playing a guitar

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Fedtastic!

When's the last time you saw an infovis application so innovative and easy-to-understand that you said to yourself, "That's fedtastic." Yes, I know, Followthemoney.org is pretty cool. Maplight.org is also a great way to track money and influence in government. But the government information resource I'm highlighting today truly is Fedtastic. No, really. That's what it's called.

Fedtastic received honorable mention in Sunlight Lab's Apps for America 2009 contest. Fedtastic takes difficult-to-find government information and makes it available to browers in an easy-to-use table format. The site is organized into four main categories: Data, Agencies, States and Congress. The Data category is separated into four sections: Money, Earth and People. Each of these divisions contains sortable data tables based on government information.

The Agencies section contains information about each federal agency and its recovery page and spending information, as well as links to each agency's own summary and budget pages.

Each state page displays budgetary information, as well as links to state representatives, home pages, the Wolfram Alpha and Wikipedia pages for each state, as well as recovery, census and OpenSecrets information.

The Congress pages list comprehensive voting information for each current Congressperson, as well as links to further information and analysis on each one's political attitudes and behavior, sources of campaign finance, and spending patterns. Which is totally fedtastic.

Friday, September 4, 2009

The Art and Technology Program: 1967-1971 at LACMA

LACMA has put together a retrospective of the Art and Technology Program: 1967-1971 spend an afternoon on. Not that I did spend my afternoon looking at this site. I spent the afternoon working. But if I did have a free afternoon I would spend it looking at this mind-blowing catalog of the pairings of major California artists and technology corporations during the late '60s. Soo relevant on so many levels...

Jean Dupuy and Ampex

Larry Bell and the RAND Corporation

Robert Rauschenberg and Teledyne

Karlheinz Stockhausen and AT&T

For me, it's not too early to call this the best digitization project of the year.

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Anatomy Atlases: A digital library of anatomy information

Hi! The dust is settling on my new job and routine and I've been thinking about writing for Reference Site of the Day for too long- it's time to finally do it!

I'm very encouraged by the statistics for this blog. I'm seeing increased traffic from overseas, esp. developing areas that are underserved by library services but still in need of quality (and free) information. The search terms leading users to the blog are encouraging as well: posts are being discovered based on both topic and resource names with oftentimes a nice match between the resource and keywords used. I hope this continues, as a major goal of this blog is to publicize free and reliable information resources for public libraries, researchers, and underserved communities in all regions of the world.

Today's resource is Anatomy Atlases. I know I promised several of you that this blog wouldn't be "all about science" now that I work at a hospital, but this is an excellent site for all kinds of users. And as public librarians know, anatomy textbooks and resources have a way of not making it back to the library at the end of the semester. So an online version for nursing and other science undergraduates is a useful reference to have on hand.

Anatomy Atlases is curated by Ronald A. Bergman, Ph.D. The mission of the site is "To educate patients, healthcare providers, and students in a free and anonymous manner" with the stated purpose of improving patient outcomes. The site is searchable and browseable, and contains texts on microanatomy and cross-sectional anatomy.

Anatomy Atlases is one of a series of digital medical libraries made available by Michael P. D'Alessandro, MD and Donna D'Allessandro, MD. Other libraries include resources for medical students and pediatricians.

These are excellent, free curated resources for practicing doctors who have access to other up-to-date literature and, more importantly, those who don't.