Odeo

Tagged with "mashups"

1-30 of 112 episodes

Sort By: Recently Updated

The Encyclopedia of Life: Can You Build A Wikipedia for Biology Without the Weirdos, Windbags, and Whoppers?

The Encyclopedia of Life: Can You Build A Wikipedia for Biology Without the Weirdos, Windbags, and Whoppers?

wwwade, Web 2.0, biology Wade Roush wrote: After 16 months in busin... More

wwwade, Web 2.0, biology Wade Roush wrote: After 16 months in business, Xconomy has published about 3,400 pages of articles. At this pace, we’ll get to 1.8 million pages in about 700 years. But the Encyclopedia of Life—a new scientific and educational website that will have one page for every species on the planet—intends to hit that number in just 10 years. And even then, it will only be getting started: while biologists have named, described, and catalogued some 1.8 million critters, they estimate that another 8 million species of plants, animals, fungi, bacteria, protists, viruses, and archaea remain undiscovered. That’s a seriously big website. We’re talking Wikipedia big. (The famous free online encyclopedia, begun in 2000, has 2.6 million articles in English alone, and over 10 million all told.) Which means the organizers of the Encyclopedia of Life (EOL for short) are going to have to throw out the old playbook in taxonomy—the slow and meticulous science of species classification, born 250 years ago this year with the publication of Karl Linnaeus’ Systema Naturae—and turn to the techniques of Web 2.0. Specifically, they’re going to have to rely on thousands of amateur naturalists to collect and submit data for the encyclopedia. But that creates a fascinating problem: How do you partake of the revolution in “user-generated content,” as Wikipedia has done, while keeping the material you publish wholly factual and stable—as it ought to be if the Encyclopedia of Life is to be a useful resource for scientists, students, and policy makers, and as Wikipedia manifestly is not? I’ve been reading up on the EOL project this week, and as far as I can tell, the organizers haven’t yet worked out a thorough answer to that question. Of course, not all of the material in EOL will be user-generated. A big part of the concept for the encyclopedia, a $40 million project funded by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, is that it will be a classic Web 2.0 “mashup.” You’re probably familiar with RSS news readers, which assemble headlines and stories from hundreds of separate websites; in a similar way, EOL will use Web-based aggregation technology under development at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, MA, to suck in and recompile information from existing online species databases, such as the uBio NameBank, iSpecies, FishBase, AmphibiaWeb, and North American Mammals. Another big part of EOL involves digitizing millions of print books and journal articles in 10 of the world’s leading natural history libraries, including the Harvard University Botany Libraries and the Ernst Mayr Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology here in Cambridge (the full list is here). The hope is that once this information has been scanned, run through optical-character recognition software, and automatically tagged with the appropriate metadata, it will be possible to access passages from the scientific literature from the relevant species pages in EOL. Say you’re researching Nicrophorus americanus, the American Burying Beetle—a colorful but critically endangered species for which there’s already a very nice page at EOL. The encyclopedia may lead you to, among other resources, a detailed description published in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia in 1853. The problem is that scanning, classifying, editing, and mashing together all of that material is going to take years, especially given that it’s all being done on the cheap (EOL and digitization partner, the Biodiversity Heritage Library, have nothing like the amount of money Google is spending on its Book Search project). But “EOL must show some results and value quickly” if it is to be taken seriously by scientists, funders, and the public at large, as the project’s own planning documents acknowledge. It’s hard to see how the current plan, spelled out in the planning documents and the project’s FAQ page, will accomplish that. Each species page is to have a volunteer “curator,” a competent scientist responsible for authenticating information submitted by contributors before it’s published. Unfortunately, the world population of trained taxonomists is only about 6,000, according to E. O. Wilson, the famed Harvard biologist who conceived EOL and is the project’s honorary chairman. So if you left the curating to the real experts, they’d each have …Next Page » Comments | Permalink | Share |  E-mail Less

Added 24 days ago    In Business

Lenlow - J-Lo vs K-Co vs S-Wo .mp3

Lenlow - J-Lo vs K-Co vs S-Wo .mp3

Freakin' awesome mashup: Stevie Wonder, Nirvana, Jennifer Lopez

Added about 1 month ago    In

18 - Lenlow - Work It Out.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

18 - Lenlow - Work It Out.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

Beyonce vs. Jurassic 5 and Dave Matthews

Added 2 months ago    In

Wordle | nyc.locationscout.us

Wordle | nyc.locationscout.us

“Wordle is a toy for generating “word clouds” from text that ... More

“Wordle is a toy for generating “word clouds” from text that you provide. The clouds give greater prominence to words that appear more frequently in the source text. You can tweak your clouds... R. Richard Hobbs | nyc.locationscout.us | New York City area film location scout, film location manager, film location library, location and production services for film, photo, video and tv. Click here to play Less

Added 2 months ago    In Entertainment

Ubiquity: Web Services + Microformats + Quicksilver = Mashups (in your browser)

Ubiquity: Web Services + Microformats + Quicksilver = Mashups (in your browser)

Ubiquity for Firefox from Aza Raskin on Vimeo. Mozilla Labs » Blog ... More

Ubiquity for Firefox from Aza Raskin on Vimeo. Mozilla Labs » Blog Archive » Introducing Ubiquity The overall goals of Ubiquity are to explore how best to: * Empower users to control the web browser with language-based instructions. (With search, users type what they want to find. With Ubiquity, they type what they want to do.) * Enable on-demand, user-generated mashups with existing open Web APIs. (In other words, allowing everyone–not just Web developers–to remix the Web so it fits their needs, no matter what page they are on, or what they are doing.) * Use Trust networks and social constructs to balance security with ease of extensibility. * Extend the browser functionality easily. I think Microsoft is going to copy the hell out of this and release a “Microsoft Live OpenWeb Command Window Beta” before mid-September. Less

Added 2 months ago    In Personal Blogs

frozen_genie.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

frozen_genie.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

Christina Aguilera versus Madonna

Added 3 months ago    In

cckylie.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

cckylie.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

Kylie Minogue versus the C&C Music Factory

Added 3 months ago    In

Native_sign.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

Native_sign.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

Justin Timberlake versus Bobby "O"

Added 3 months ago    In

Another.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

Another.mp3 (audio/mpeg Object)

Madonna versus Aquasky mashup

Added 3 months ago    In

Y Combinator Alum Omnisio Joins Google’s YouTube

Y Combinator Alum Omnisio Joins Google’s YouTube

acquisitions, video, Internet Wade Roush wrote: The latest win for ... More

acquisitions, video, Internet Wade Roush wrote: The latest win for Y Combinator, Paul Graham’s Mountain View, CA- and Cambridge, MA-based startup incubator, is Omnisio, a California Internet video startup that announced today that it’s been acquired by Google, which plans to fold it into YouTube. The companies didn’t report the purchase price, but TechCrunch is saying that it was in the neighborhood of $15 million. Omnisio’s software lets users add text notes to online videos, mash together videos from different sources (including YouTube), and synchronize lecture videos with slide presentations. As a result of the acquisition, these capabilities will now likely be available directly to YouTube contributors and viewers. Omnisio was launched in March by programmer-entrepreneurs Ryan Junee, Julian Frumar, and Simon Ratner, who all worked together at Palo Alto, CA-based network filtering company Sensory Networks. The Atherton, CA, startup participated in the Winter 2008 term of Y Combinator’s unique incubator program, which pays the living expenses of small groups of software startup founders who gather in Mountain View (during the winter) or Cambridge (during the summer) to hammer out their business plans and technology demonstrations, with advice from veteran entrepreneurs and programmers in Graham’s circle. In exchange, Y Combinator gets a small amount of stock in each startup, usually between 2 percent and 10 percent. So Graham’s maximum potential earnings in the Omnisio deal would be around $1.5 million—not a bad return on the $5,000 per founder that the company typically spends on its incubator participants. The Summer 2008 batch of Y Combinator companies will be showing off their wares at three Demo Days next month: one in Cambridge and two in Mountain View. Other Y Combinator companies that have achieved acquisitions include social bookmarking service Reddit (purchased by Conde Nast’s Wired division) and Auctomatic (purchased by Communicate.com), which makes software for managing online auction inventories. Comments | Permalink | Share |  E-mail Less

Added 3 months ago    In Business

Untitled

Untitled

best mashup set evar

Added 5 months ago    In

Untitled

Untitled

Added 5 months ago    In

Untitled

Untitled

Added 5 months ago    In

Untitled

Untitled

Added 5 months ago    In

Untitled

Untitled

Added 5 months ago    In

[mp3] Jon Udell interviews Ray Ozzie about Live Mesh

[mp3] Jon Udell interviews Ray Ozzie about Live Mesh

Added 6 months ago    In

Using video prompts and responses in online creative writing courses

Using video prompts and responses in online creative writing courses

Podcast. One of the most effective approaches to elearning is to pr... More

Podcast. One of the most effective approaches to elearning is to provide guided questions that bring together student experiences and the course content. In a creative writing class, the value of using prompts is to keep students focused on a specific technique, and making clear connections to personal experience. An example is a series of video clips and "mini-lessons" that can be used as [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]] Less

Added 7 months ago    In

Using video prompts and responses in online creative writing courses

Using video prompts and responses in online creative writing courses

Added 7 months ago    In

1-30 of 112 episodes