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News from JURN

Category Archives: JURN tips and tricks

How to TORpedo newspaper blockages

21 Monday Oct 2013

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ 2 Comments

It suddenly occurred to me that the TOR bundle and its browser might be a simple and easy way to route around newspaper and magazine roadblocks. And it seems to be so. Using the TOR browser just now, I was able to fully access a Chicago Tribune opinion piece on H.P. Lovecraft shedding his former lowly literary status (only available to USA users, whereas I’m in the UK). Also a London Telegraph article on the flood of French citizens fleeing the effects of socialism (blocked for regular UK visitors by a subscription pop-up layer). It works in both instances. Sending to a Kindle is tricky from the Tor browser — but a simple copy-paste to a .txt file, and then a Send to Kindle right-click operation does the trick.

Advanced Power Searching Challenge

18 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ 1 Comment

Take Google’s Advanced Power Searching Challenge.

I tried the first (“easy”) challenge and did it in about three minutes…

“During the glory days of radio, it was illegal to mimic the voice of the US president.” Was there actually a law prohibiting that? Or was it just a White House policy and not a legal issue?

I didn’t use any of the resources suggested. I simply pasted the question into the main Google Search, cut back “glory days”, wafted around a bit and swiftly found an indication that it was a Will Rogers who first impersonated a U.S. president on radio. Admittedly I do have my Google Search results fairly streamlined and filtered and ad-blocked. I only looked at the text snippets in the search results, and didn’t waste time clicking through.

In the next moment I formulated a Google Books search…

   “Will Rogers” “radio” “impersonation” “president”

…and instantly hit a University of Massachusetts Press book with full-view preview pages, The Dance of the Comedians: The People, the President, and the Performance of Political Standup Comedy in America, 2010. The link landed me on the correct pages, which gave the detailed story of those early radio years in a scholarly chapter. I was able to get/skim enough pages to put me on the right track, although I didn’t bother to page through to see if the actual endnotes were available. This was just a first pass.

Cutting out the “Will Rogers” name and then running the search query again as: “radio” “impersonation” “president” in Google Books gave me (first result) a full-view preview of pages inside the book The American President in Popular Culture, 2005. My first instinct was to find the publisher, as publisher details were missing for it in the Google Books sidebar. But a quick tickle of Amazon showed the book to be from Greenwood — another reliable scholarly publisher, known for their popular culture guides and encyclopedias. The landing page for this book was perfect and succinctly continued the story of presidential vocal impersonation through to the Kennedy era and into the 1990s. This initial two minutes of searching had landed me amid the precise keywords and names needed to dig out primary sources and deeper scholarship, had I wanted to.

At this point I was still at the stage of very quickly skim-reading a couple of pages of the books, to ensure I was on the right track. I had enough to be able to go back and pin down the answer to the question about the “glory days” (1920s). Also to know where to start to begin to answer the second part of the question, which specifically asked about the written law.

But at that point I knew intuitively that I could fairly swiftly also find out if impersonation was actually banned by law during: i) the authoritarian years of the later New Deal (in the late 1930s, with war approaching and FDR touchy about his image, the big radio networks such as NBC and CBS apparently did not allow him to be impersonated); ii) during wartime; and iii) during the 1950s Cold War. I had already triangulated my rough initial framework well enough, to be able to roughly bookend the search period in my mind: Will Rogers used presidential impersonation frequently, and Kennedy loved being vocally impersonated. I already knew that in the 1970s ‘Tricky Dicky’ was knee deep in aggressively free-speech hippies, so he was unlikely to ban anything like that. Reagan apparently enjoyed being impersonated. So I would only have to go back and check for national laws circa 1937-1957, and at the same time keep an eye out for obscure per-state and city laws while putting together the complete timeline for the 1920-1970 period. Only at that point might I have hit search tools for online legal rulings — it would have been pointless to start with them.

Papercrop

17 Tuesday Sep 2013

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ Leave a comment

Got a multi-column academic paper in PDF? Papercrop is free Windows desktop software that reworks the PDF, so that it’s more readable on mobile e-reading devices.

papercrop

IssueM

12 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks, Open Access publishing

≈ Leave a comment

A possibly useful journal publishing plugin for those who love WordPress. IssueM is a commercial ($55) plugin that lets you manage a WordPress install as if it were an issue-based magazine, complete with auto-archiving. The suggested page-design is very “American magazine” in tone, but could probably be improved with a few CSS tweaks…

issuem

How to get RSS from a Google+ or Facebook group

02 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ 3 Comments

How to get RSS feeds from a Google+ group:

1. Install the Feed+ for Google Chrome addon in your Web browser. Authenticate it.

2. Paste in the ID number, from the home URL of your target Google+ group.

3. The addon will then give you an RSS link for FeedDemon (or other dedicated RSS software), and also a link to send the feed to Google Reader.

My standalone FeedDemon software accepted and validated my test feed, and gave me a full list of the posts.


How to get RSS feeds from a Facebook group:

1. Grab the ID number of the Facebook group from the home URL.

2. Visit this Yahoo Pipes script — feed it the ID number and it will pop out a valid RSS feed for the group.

I’ve successfully used this to plug a Facebook group feed into the sidebars of several blogs.


How to get an RSS feed for any Facebook fan page:

1. Copy the end bit of your Fan page’s URL. e.g. the end bit from http://www.facebook.com/MyFanPage

2. Paste this onto the end of https://graph.facebook.com/ e.g.: https://graph.facebook.com/MyFanPage

3. Run this new URL in your Web browser. Note and copy the ID number, found in the code that is returned.

4. Use this ID number to replace the ID number in this URL: https://www.facebook.com/feeds/page.php?id=123456789101&format=rss20

You now have a valid RSS feed for updates on your Facebook fan page.

How to do reverse search in Google Images Search

28 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks, JURN's Google watch

≈ Leave a comment

How to do reverse image search in Google Images Search:

1. Find and copy the original direct URL of the image which needs identifying.

2. Go to Google Image Search and click on the camera icon in the search box…

is1

3. A search dialogue box will open. Paste the image’s URL into the box, and search…

is2

4. View results…

is3

You can also upload an image, as well as just paste an URL.

How to add “Any Site” search in Google Chrome

19 Saturday Jan 2013

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ Leave a comment

Enable in-browser Google keyword search of any website you visit:

1. Right-click on your Google Chrome address bar. “Select Edit Search Engines…”

searchany1

2. Wait for your current list of search engines to load. Then scroll down to the bottom of the list, to find the “Add a new search engine” boxes…

searchany2

There add a new search engine…

Name: Any Site

Keyword: as

URL: [sourcecode language=”javascript”]
javascript:location=’http://www.google.com/search?num=100&q=site:’%20+%20escape(location.hostname)%20+%20’%20%S’%20;%20void%200
[/sourcecode]

3. While visiting any website you can now type: as keyword into your browser’s address bar (aka the ‘omnibar’)…

searchany3

On pressing the return key you will get back a page of Google Search results. These results will be for your keyword, drawn only from the current website being visited…

searchany4

Enjoy!

JURN results now re-sortable by date

14 Monday May 2012

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks

≈ Leave a comment

I’m pleased to say that the JURN search results are now re-sortable by date…

Elegant typography for Web journal articles

04 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks, New media journal articles

≈ Leave a comment

Three really interesting developments in fine Web typography, which may interest ejournal editors concerned with presenting elegant HTML articles online…

* Typesetter.js is a javascript bundle able to parse a Web page on the fly, and embed numerous typographic qualities that are usually only associated with print.

* Lettering.js offers “complete down-to-the-letter control” for making appealing magazine-style layouts.

* Arctext.js puts curvy text on your webpage.

Google Web Fonts service

31 Tuesday Jan 2012

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks, JURN's Google watch

≈ Leave a comment

Google Web Fonts, a new Google service. It offers a snippet of code that styles your website with a font. The font streams in over the Web, so your website’s text looks to the same to all visitors. Although, judging by my experience of using a similar system with WordPress.com, it will slow down page loading. An especially nice choice for historians to experiment with might be Old Standard TT font…

  [ Hat-tip: Beautiful Web Type ]

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