Annoyingly fuzzy

It seems Google’s annoying “second-guessing” function has now been added to Google Blog Search. For instance, a search for “Lovecraft” now also picks up blogs that use the word “craft”, albeit not until the second page — presumably this is done on the assumption that the searcher doesn’t really know what they’re looking for. It’d be great if Google would allow advanced searchers to turn this dumb feature off, so we don’t have to keep on typing a + sign in front of keywords and phrases.

Update: a day later it seems to to have returned to normal.

Studying the ten blue links

Notes, Lists and Everyday Inscriptions is a Digital Commons summer school in the cultural studies tradition…

“In this cluster of The New Everyday we examine new everyday inscriptions, both the scholarly and the utterly mundane — from the grocery list to the collaboratively organized and annotated archive.”

I’ve just contributed a short ‘starter’ bibliography on the culture and history of lists.

There’s a lot of attention in the starter essays to list-making, since lists and sets of structured notes serve as a reflection and extension of personhood. Also attention to lists as constructions of ranked authenticity, part and parcel of the individual attempt to win the cultural capital that will contribute to the raising of one’s social rank. What I would also find interesting is thinking that would help deepen our cultural understanding of the automated lists that so imperfectly reflect only our chosen input terms. I’d like to pay attention to what happens so fleetingly, at the magical/mundane point of delivery for Google search results. Academics generally and somewhat lazily consider that we all have an intuitive understanding of lists and the treasure hunts they can provoke, and that the “important learning stuff” only starts to happen in our brain after at some point after we abstract selected search results into various forms of self-selected storage — bookmarks, unstructured Notepad notes, our HTML editor, our “send link by email” widget, Zotero, etc. But in a very real sense, searching is learning. Can cultural studies contribute to a deeper understanding of the powerful but invisible genre of communication/learning that is the ubiquitous list of ten blue Web links?

User Behaviour in Resource Discovery – UK report

A paper at the recent ALT-C 2010 conference (titled: ‘Into something rich and strange’ — making sense of the sea-change) brings confirmation that students are abandoning or simply never using expensive library databases. Middlesex University researchers reported that…

“People expect library resources to work in the same way as those available on the internet, that is, simple and user friendly. Unless changes are made within library-subscribed [services], users will continue utilising internet resources [thus] missing the opportunity of accessing high quality scholarly materials.” […] “Many had never met their subject librarian, nor were they aware that the library provides subject support in finding information”

The conference paper would seem to arise from the Middlesex University JISC User Behaviour Observational Study: User Behaviour in Resource Discovery – Final Report (Nov 2009), which is online for free.

Deposits bin

An interesting comment from the moderator of the E-Book and E-content 2010 meeting at UCL Centre for Publishing, which is online as a podcast…

“Most research councils [ UK, such as AHRC ] don’t even enforce the deposit [ in a public-facing repository ] of a proper report at the end of their [ research team’s ] project. I know that because they don’t make them available. And the reason why they don’t make them available is because they’re no good.”

A summary report on the entire meeting is available here.

JURN is ready for the new academic year

JURN is now ready for the new academic year. I’ve hand-checked all the links on the “A short guide to free academic search” page. All this blog’s sidebar links have been checked. The main index has been checked for link-rot via the checking of the home-page URLs on the Directory page, leading to about fifty URL repairs and the exclusion of dead journals. The big PDF list of journal titles is now up-to-date. Announcements of new and recent journals have been surveyed via various means including a few hours of Google searches, and added if suitable, so the main index is as up-to-date as it can be. Enjoy!

ScholarLynk

Details of a new prototype tool from Microsoft Research: ScholarLynk

“ScholarLynk is a desktop solution aiming to support researchers in building and maintaining ‘reading lists’ of resources in collaboration with other researchers […] tools for (i) constructing reading lists by tagging the desired resources, (ii) seamlessly incorporating remote data sources as desktop resources, and (iii) supporting in-context communication, sharing of reading lists, and collaboration with other users of the ScholarLynk.

The prototype implementation leverages the DRIVER Infrastructure for European Open Access [repository] publications that currently comprises 2,500,000 publication records from over 250 repositories world wide.”

Anthologize for WordPress – ebook-maker plugin

Anthologize turns your WordPress blog into a platform for the production of an ebook. Funded by the U.S. National Endowment for the Humanities. Output formats include…

“PDF, ePub, and TEI, an open XML format for storage and exchange.”

It’s a 0.4 alpha, but seems very promising. If you want to use it with a WordPress.com account, you’ll need to export all your content, then reimport all your content into a self-hosted WordPress install.