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News from JURN

Category Archives: Spotted in the news

BBC Weather: a chance of probabilities

30 Tuesday Jan 2018

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

The BBC Weather forecast page has changed. It’s slightly clunkier now, in terms of graphic elegance. Certainly a move away from the near-perfect design they had before. But there are new features, as trade-offs. Presumably the change is because the promised new supercomputers are now online, as so we get a nine-day default view rather than the previous five-day default view. They’ve also added a new unlabelled “Chance of precipitation” (meaning, rain) icon down the bottom just above the wind speed and direction…

To the 95% of the population who don’t understand probabilities, and are anyway not able to meaningfully apply them within the highly variable system that is the British weather, that new additional icon is probably unwanted. Also, why show a visual icon of rain when it’s not at all likely to happen? It’s a form of pessimistic “fake news”, done in the language of graphic design.

If you want to remove these “Chance of precipitation” icons, here’s how to do it in Firefox. I’m assuming you have AdblockPlus installed and its Element Hiding Helper add-on, which only work properly in FF55 or lower. In Adblock go to: Filter Preferences | Element Hiding Rules | Add filter. Add the following new rule…

bbc.co.uk##[class*="wr-time-slot-primary__precipitation wr-time-slot-primary__precipitation--grey gel-brevier"]

This removes the grey “low” probability icons…

If you also want the blue “low-medium” probability icons gone, then add the following rule…

bbc.co.uk##[class*="wr-time-slot-primary__precipitation wr-time-slot-primary__precipitation--blue gel-brevier"]

Even after this blocking, you can always click on an hour-slice and you get a slide-out which gives a more sensible type of “Chance of precipitation”…

The gradations here are far more simple: Low chance | Chance | High chance. That’s good enough for me, as I don’t need to be constantly juggling with fine percentage gradations of an hourly probability of rain. We’re a damp nation and the ever-changing weather in a specific locality is complicated enough as it is.

Here’s what the BBC Weather’s new nine-day hourly forecast looks like, after fixing…

Regular users will probably also want to block the new animated tickers, the huge and ugly new satellite map that loads under the bottom of the page, and other page-junk, in order to speed up loading.

“Utility of primary scientific literature to environmental managers”

18 Thursday Jan 2018

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

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“Utility of primary scientific literature to environmental managers: an international case study on coral-dominated marine protected areas” (preprint, Nov 2017)…

“To assess accessibility of MPA science to decision-makers we conducted a literature search using the database SCOPUS … limiting our search to all ‘articles’ and ‘reviews’ published between 1 January 2009 and 31 December 2012. … only 43% of primary scientific articles and 50% of review papers relating to coral dominated MPAs [marine protected areas] were freely accessible to decision makers.”

Although keep in mind here that SCOPUS only has 29.18% coverage of the DOAJ Open Access titles, so is not likely to do well on many types of OA indexing test.

Parker Library On the Web

18 Thursday Jan 2018

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

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Parker Library On the Web. Now in version 2.0, online and public, and with new viewer and a “clearly articulated Creative Commons license”…

“The Parker Library boasts one of the most significant collections of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts written in Latin and Old English as well as impressive holdings in Middle English and Anglo-Norman literature. Open access to those manuscripts means greater opportunities for research and teaching.”

Jitsi Meet

18 Thursday Jan 2018

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

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Jitsi Meet.

“Jitsi Meet is a fully encrypted, 100% open source video conferencing solution that you can use all day, every day, for free — with no account needed.”

Open Source, too. At first it appears to be Android and iOS only, but scroll down and there’s a Windows desktop version on the list. I’m not sure if it scales, so that you can reliably use it for 30 or more people for a peak-time webinar. But it might be worth trying.

Limited Dimensions

17 Wednesday Jan 2018

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

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Dimensions is a new academic search-engine owned by mega-publisher SpringerNature, whose press-release is today being picked up by the likes of Nature and The Bookseller.

Hook said: “Dimensions is not intended to be a bibliometric product, but rather a discovery product”. (The Bookseller, 15th Jan 2018)

It’s about discovery and it’s public, so I gave it a quick test:

  mongolian folk song (choosing the “full data” option).

Getting Dimensions to “Limit to” Open Access and reload results according, was a fiddly multi-click operation. But when this was done, none of the results were relevant. It even managed to surface an article touching on Du Bois (author of the 1903 book Souls of Black Folk), a highly spurious result known to me from previous group tests, and which appears to arise from some antiquated synonym algorithm that states “Mongolian = black”. The best Dimensions could do, in over 100 results, was the tangentially relevant paper “Translocal English in the linguascape of Mongolian popular music”, on the use of the English language in the music scene of post-socialist Mongolia. This article’s record page gave a valid link which eventually got me to the full article at Wiley.

I then removed their OA filter, which actually improved OA results! However the top results were then questionable. The top two results were relevant, but both were from the Canadian Center of Science and Education. The third result was also relevant, but from the Atlantis Press. Despite being OA, none of the sources for these three results are indexed by the DOAJ or JURN. As for JURN, they never will be. The Scholarly Kitchen suggests that Dimensions users may be finding more such results in their search…

“Dimensions is inclusive in terms of content coverage, rather than curated as is the case for Scopus and Web of Science. Of course, what reads to some as more inclusive can be seen by others as less rigorous selection…”

On both search types the results rapidly devolved into off-topic medical and a few natural-history items, although there was one relevant book review lurking in one set of ‘the first 100’ results, plus a possibly-relevant chapter. Sadly the review article was found to be on the ‘academia-only’ service Project Muse, and as such all but the first page was blocked to the public. The book chapter on “Tourism and culture in Mongolia” was perhaps at Elsevier, but on arrival Elsevier’s link gave the response that “Your request cannot be processed at this time”, presumably due to my lack of log-on credentials.

If Dimensions had been in my recent group-test based on these keywords, it would have been nowhere in the rankings, with a score of “1” for “Translocal English in the linguascape of Mongolian popular music”. And even then it’s a marginal result, and so I would have been being charitable to Dimensions.

New LIDAR 3D map of the UK

12 Friday Jan 2018

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

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Aircraft equipped with laser scanners are making a new accurate 3D map of the UK, showing everything more than 3 feet wide…

“The new project, starting immediately and running through winter 2018, will cover all of England’s national parks, areas of outstanding natural beauty and sites of special scientific interest (SSSIs) such as the Peak District … the data is expected to be made available for free to the public and industry.”

Previous data sets have been public, and have helped uncover things like ancient Roman roads through the landscape — though were not so detailed or up-to-date as this one will be.

Catalogue Raisonne of Paintings by Salvador Dali

02 Tuesday Jan 2018

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

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The official Catalogue Raisonne of Paintings by Salvador Dali, fully updated after 17 years of work, and now online and public. Pictures are screen-res, in pop-ups, and there’s a small unobtrusive watermark at the bottom of each picture.

The definitive Dali sculptures catalogue is planned to be online at the end of 2018.

Call 9.9.9.9

01 Monday Jan 2018

Posted by futurilla in JURN tips and tricks, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

If you’ve spent 2017 being periodically plagued by your ISP’s flaky DNS server, IBM Security has a fast free-and-public DNS lookup server called Quad9 at the 9.9.9.9 address. It was introduced in November, but many will have been so busy in the weeks before Christmas that the news passed them by. It’s very easy to apply, and once in use it filters out the addresses of botnets, phishing scams and the like. As well as your desktop PC, it can also be applied to your various devices and even to your router.

IBM state that Quad9 is “engineered to not store, correlate or otherwise leverage any personally identifiable information (PII) from its users.” It’s been set up as a non-profit and it passes the sniff-test among the sceptical techies at The Register, who usefully note that Quad9 also has a free IPv6 DNS server at 2620:fe::fe


Update: Regrettably it completely shuts down your DNS access if you try to run legitimate link-checking software such as Linkbot. Presumably the system flags you as a botnet if you try to run Web automation software of that type. Oh well. Which means Quad9 has been uninstalled here. Though if you don’t check the links on your websites frequently, then it may be useful to you. It can also be useful as an emergency fall-back, and the 9.9.9.9 address is easy to remember. Google has a similar product at 8.8.8.8

Entering the public domain in early 2018

30 Saturday Dec 2017

Posted by futurilla in Spotted in the news

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Detailed surveys of writers entering the public domain in early 2018: one (some are USA-only, with a death-date of 1967), two (UK, taking a death date of 1947), and the dynamic list at the Wikipedia page 2018 in public domain (Wikipedia, so to be treated with the usual caution).

Completeness and overlap in open access systems

22 Friday Dec 2017

Posted by futurilla in Academic search, Spotted in the news

≈ Leave a comment

A new paper, “Completeness and overlap in open access systems: Search engines, aggregate institutional repositories and physics-related open sources”. It tests the coverage of papers published from 2001-2013 by Nobel Prize winners in Physics. ‘Not all that many papers, then…’ you might think, but apparently 6,094 items were searched for.

96.8%  Google Scholar
96.5%  Astrophysics Data System
91.6%  Microsoft Academic (current version)
48%  OpenDOAR
45.3%  OAIster

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