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News from JURN

Monthly Archives: January 2011

Europa Orientalis

11 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by futurilla in New titles added to JURN

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Added to the JURN index:—

Europa Orientalis : studies and research on Eastern Europe (Full-text 1982-1998, 1999-2004, 2007-2008. Italian | Russian | French | English).

+

Articles on weaving at the On-Line Digital Archive of Documents on Weaving and Related Topics.

Suhayl

10 Monday Jan 2011

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Added to the JURN index:—

Suhayl : international journal for the history of the exact and natural sciences in Islamic civilisation

Interdisciplinary Communications

10 Monday Jan 2011

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Added to the JURN index:—

Interdisciplinary Communications (2003-2009. The Centre for Advanced Study at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters)

Lost.fm?

10 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by futurilla in How to improve academic search, My general observations

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Can ‘taste engines’ and ‘recommendation engines’ cut through the clutter of the web? Or just serve us up an awkward hit-and-miss selection, based on the likes of our tasteless friends and the sort of clumsy clumping of artists/genres that can’t distinguish between Ziggy Bowie and Tin Machine Bowie? People often point to the system at Last.fm, but what does the research say? Some interesting quotes from the article “User Acceptance Issues in Music Recommender Systems” (2009) by Jones & Pu…

“Users perceived Last.fm’s recommendation technology as being less accurate … this is supported by post-study interviews where Last.fm users often reflected negatively on the accuracy during the post-study interviews” … “People only half agreed than ‘if similar technology existed for recommending other items (books, movies) then they would use it’.”

“Last.fm is clearly a successful website with more than ten million users. However, based on our results we believe that this does not primarily come from the recommender system which clearly poses some problems,” (Jones & Pu, 2009).

Kanagawa University Studies in Humanities

09 Sunday Jan 2011

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Added to the JURN index:—

Kanagawa University Studies in Humanities (2007-2010. Mostly Japanese. But also a good number of English articles)…

Lucy Boston’s Kaleidoscopic World of Fantasy in The Guardians of …

The Illustrator’s Interpretation of a Time Fantasy

Passion and the Mirror : Angela Carter’s Souvenir of Japan

Philippa Pearce as a Storyteller in “The Shadow-Cage”

Women and the Gender Boundary in Elizabethan England

Myth as Structure in Raintree County

How to copy URLs with their anchor text alongside them

08 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ 3 Comments

The excellent free MultiLinks addon for Firefox can be a handy way to open links in many tabs. Just Crtl + right mouse-click and drag a box around the links you want to open. Then when you release the mouse, your selected links spring into life as new tabs all busy loading pages.

But MultiLinks can also work as a very handy links harvester, neatly copying URLs complete with their anchor text to the clipboard. That can certainly beat ferreting around among the code in ‘View Source’. Here’s how to do it.

1. Install MultiLinks. Then go to Tools | Addons…

2. Click the “Options” button on the MultiLinks listing…

3. Change the behaviour of MultiLinks to: Copy to Clipboard | URLs with Titles…

4. You can also tell it to ignore everything except the main links, on pages of Google Search results…

5. Now when you Crtl + right-click and drag a box around some Web links, when you release the mouse button those URLs and their anchor (title) text are placed on your clipboard. Not very useful, unless Excel 2007 automatically places these side-by-side in different columns. Thankfully it does…

6. Now you can use Excel to automatically turn them back into HTML links, as soon as you paste them into your spreadsheet. My ready-made spreadsheet with formula applied is URL-maker.xlsx. It uses the simple concatenation (‘combine columns’) formula: =C2&B2&D2&A2&E2

Spatium

08 Saturday Jan 2011

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Added to the JURN index and Directory:—

Spatium (2002-2010. Review of the Institute of Architecture, Urban & Spatial Planning of Serbia. In English. TOCs at Doi Serbia)

A little more history of medicine

06 Thursday Jan 2011

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Added to the JURN index:—

University of Western Ontario Medical Journal (Just indexing Vol. 78, No. 1 – the History of Medicine special issue)

The rising tide of Web spam

06 Thursday Jan 2011

Posted by futurilla in JURN's Google watch, My general observations

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A big dollop of lazy journo-bluster has landed at The Guardian, over the amount of outright spam that’s been inveigling itself into the Google search-results.

This growing so-called backlash is largely down to some users thinking they can still type in dishwasher review and get good results. Those “two keywords is enough” days are over — just spend 50 minutes learning how to search properly, guys. Yet some people are going to find learning this more difficult than others — more and more people who not fully literate are now trying to use the web. They can’t skim-read the results very well, or remember how to do complex strings of search modifiers. The ‘advanced search’ forms scare them. All the more reason why we need to be teaching search literacy from infant school onward.

Perhaps the Googleplexers who do nothing else but weed for spam are being temporarily overwhelmed? There’s an obvious tidal wave of robot-registered domains being populated by robots with robot-made pages. 99% of this Web spam has never seen a human hand, other than in the plagiarised material that gets pirated, semi-garbled, and pasted into the page. So, hire as many people as it takes to rip out the spam. It’s not as though Google doesn’t have the cash to throw another 500 eyeballs at the problem.

The other problem that people seem to be raising in the Guardian comments is that we don’t really have a reliable hand-made search-engine for product reviews, one that is devoted to serving only reliable reviews from reliable sources — and nothing else. Certainly, I’ve never found one I like and feel I can trust, and which is comprehensive in its sources and relevant to the UK.

Three new journals

05 Wednesday Jan 2011

Posted by futurilla in New titles added to JURN

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Three ejournals newly added to the JURN index:—

Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies, The (1988-2010. Occasional historical/religious articles, e.g. “Our Shamanistic Past: The Korean Government, Shamans and Shamanism”; “A Survey of Confucius Studies in China Today”, etc)

Korea Studies Review.

Korea Journal (Test PDFs were available from the archives, but these arrived via javascript without the .pdf file extension. The same problem exists for PDFs found via Google at: site:http://www.ekoreajournal.net/upload/pdf/  Simply add a .pdf to the downloaded file-name)

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